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Expanding indications for the extended endoscopic endonasal approach to hypothalamic gliomas: preliminary report
- Source :
- Neurosurgical Focus. 37:E11
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG), 2014.
-
Abstract
- Object In the last decade the indications for the endoscopic endonasal approach have been progressively expanded to include lesions that have not been traditionally considered amenable to resection through the transsphenoidal route. In this study, the authors analyze their experience with hypothalamic gliomas treated via the endoscopic endonasal approach. Methods Consecutive cases of hypothalamic gliomas treated since 2007 via an endoscopic endonasal approach were reviewed. Preoperative and postoperative neuroimaging as well as endocrinological, neurological, and visual symptoms were analyzed to assess the surgical outcome. Signs and symptoms of hypothalamic dysfunction including body mass index (BMI), memory, sleep-wake rhythm, and polyphagia were prospectively collected pre- and postoperatively to assess hypothalamic function. Quality of life was evaluated using the Katz scale. Results In the initial phase the endoscopic endonasal approach was adopted in 3 cases with a palliative intent, to obtain a biopsy sample or for debulking of the mass followed by radio- or chemotherapy. In 2 later cases it was successfully adopted to achieve gross-total tumor resection. Complications consisted of 2 postoperative CSF leaks, which required an endoscopic endonasal reintervention. Visual deficit improved in 3 cases and normalized in the other 2. Four patients developed diabetes insipidus, and 3 an anterior panhypopituitarism. All patients had a moderate increase in BMI. No patients presented with any other signs of hypothalamic damage, and their quality of life at follow-up is normal. Conclusions Despite the limitations of a short follow-up and small sample, the authors’ early experience with the endoscopic endonasal approach has revealed it to be a direct, straightforward, and safe approach to third ventricle astrocytomas. It allowed the authors to perform tumor resection with the same microsurgical technique: dissecting the tumor with 2 hands, performing a central debulking, and controlling the bleeding with bipolar coagulation. The main limitations were represented by some anatomical conditions, such as the position of the chiasm and the anterior communicating artery complex and, finally, by the challenge of watertight plastic repair. To definitively evaluate the role of this approach in hypothalamic gliomas, a comparison with transcranial series would be necessary, but due to the rarity of these cases such a study is still lacking. The authors observed that more aggressive surgery is associated with a worse endocrinological outcome; thus they consider it to be an open question (in particular in prepubertal patients) whether radical removal is an advisable goal for hypothalamic gliomas.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Adolescent
Endoscopic endonasal surgery
Nose
Hypothalamic glioma
Neurosurgical Procedure
Neurosurgical Procedures
Body Mass Index
Young Adult
Postoperative Complications
Quality of life
Retrospective Studie
medicine.artery
Extended transplanum/transtuberculum approach
medicine
Humans
pilocytic astrocytoma
Retrospective Studies
Third ventricle
Cerebrospinal fluid leak
Pilocytic astrocytoma
business.industry
Endoscopy
Glioma
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Debulking
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Hypothalamic Neoplasm
Surgery
Anterior communicating artery
medicine.anatomical_structure
Diabetes insipidus
Female
Postoperative Complication
Neurology (clinical)
Hypothalamic Neoplasms
business
Human
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10920684
- Volume :
- 37
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Neurosurgical Focus
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....393a3cd209ab949b40a43b381901305c
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3171/2014.7.focus14317