1. Outcomes of Trigeminal Ganglion Sparing Surgical Resection of Nonacoustic Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors Causing Trigeminal Neuralgia.
- Author
-
Tugend M, Washington E, and Sekula RF Jr
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Adult, Cerebellopontine Angle surgery, Cohort Studies, Neuroma, Acoustic surgery, Neuroma, Acoustic complications, Neurosurgical Procedures methods, Cerebellar Neoplasms surgery, Cerebellar Neoplasms complications, Organ Sparing Treatments methods, Trigeminal Neuralgia surgery, Trigeminal Neuralgia etiology, Trigeminal Ganglion surgery
- Abstract
Objective: Tumors may be responsible for up to 5% of trigeminal neuralgia cases. Predictors of long-term pain relief after surgical resection of various cerebellopontine angle tumor types are not well understood. Previous studies found that size and extent of resection predict long-term pain status, although resection of tumor involving the trigeminal ganglion may be associated with high morbidity. This study evaluated predictors of TN pain freedom after resection of a nonacoustic CPA tumor, with avoidance of any portion involving the TG., Methods: In a retrospective cohort study, we evaluated clinical outcomes and complications after surgical resection of nonacoustic CPA tumors with purposeful avoidance of the TG causing trigeminal neuralgia. The primary outcome was pain-freedom. We performed logistic regression analyses to examine the relationship between pain-freedom at last follow-up and age, side of symptoms, preoperative symptom duration, tumor diameter, tumor type, and concurrent neurovascular compression (NVC)., Results: Of 18 patients with nonacoustic CPA tumors causing TN treated with surgical resection, 83.3% were pain-free at last follow-up (mean 44.6 months). Age (P = 0.12), side (P = 0.41), preoperative symptom duration (P = 0.85), tumor diameter (P = 0.29), tumor type (P = 0.37), and NVC presence (P = 0.075) were not associated with long-term pain freedom., Conclusions: This study provides additional evidence that various tumor types causing TN may safely undergo surgical resection and decompression of the trigeminal nerve to treat TN. This study presents a cohort of patients that underwent resection of a nonacoustic CPA tumor, with purposeful avoidance of the TG to minimize complications, demonstrating high rates of long-term pain freedom., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF