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Can an Imaging Marker of Consistency Predict Intraoperative Experience and Clinical Outcomes for Vestibular Schwannomas? A Retrospective Review. J Neurol Surg B Skull Base 2021 Apr;82(2):251-257

Date

03/30/2021

Pubmed ID

33777640

Pubmed Central ID

PMC7987379

DOI

10.1055/s-0039-1697026

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85103166965 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)

Abstract

Objective  The main purpose of this article is to determine if vestibular schwannoma consistency as determined by tissue intensity on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imagings (MRIs) is predictive of intraoperative experience and postoperative clinical outcomes. Study Design  Retrospective chart review. Setting  Tertiary referral center. Patients  Seventy-seven patients diagnosed with vestibular schwannomas who were treated with microsurgical resection. Intervention  Diagnostic. Main Outcome Measures  Intraoperative measures include totality of resection, surgical time and cranial nerve VII stimulation and postoperative measures include House-Brackmann grade and perioperative complications. Results  Tumor consistency determined via tissue intensity on MRI was only found to correlate with surgical time, with a softer tumor being associated with a longer surgical time ( p  < 0.0001). However, this was primarily driven by tumor volume with larger tumors being associated with longer surgical time based on multivariate analysis. None of the other intraoperative or postoperative measures considered were found to correlate with tumor consistency. Conclusions  Tumor consistency determined by MRI is not predictive of intraoperative experience or postoperative outcomes in vestibular schwannomas. Tumor volume is the strongest driver of these outcome measures as opposed to tumor consistency.

Author List

Macielak RJ, Harris MS, Mattingly JK, Shah VS, Prevedello LM, Adunka OF

Author

Michael S. Harris MD Associate Professor in the Otolaryngology department at Medical College of Wisconsin