2025 Proffered Presentations
S171: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY EXPERIENCE OF VESTIBULAR SCHWANNOMA SURGERY OVER 12 YEARS: ANALYSIS OF FACIAL NERVE AND HEARING OUTCOMES AND THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PREOPERATIVE RADIOLOGIC FEATURES
Mehdi Khaleghi; Kyle C Wu; Bilal Mohammad Alsavaf; Vivian Kaul; Lucas P Carlstrom; Robert Maceilak; Luciano Prevedello; Oliver F Adunka; Daniel M Prevedello; Ohio State University, Wexner Medical Center
Objective: The reports on facial nerve functional preservation and serviceable hearing rates in vestibular schwannoma (VS) surgery are not uniform in the literature, and reliable clinical and radiologic predictors are still lacking. We report our twelve-year experience in surgical management of VS via three main surgical approaches, with a special focus on analyzing the predictability of radiologic characteristics of the tumor on facial nerve and hearing outcomes.
Methods: 205 patients with VS who underwent surgical resection from July 2012 to July 2023 were retrospectively reviewed. Patients with neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) and non-primary VS were excluded. Audiogram findings and postoperative early (during admission), short-term (at six months), and long-term (>one year) facial examination follow-up data were assessed.
Results: A total of 187 patients with a median age of 52 years (range 18-77) and female rate of 55.1% were included. Serviceable hearing was confirmed in 58/92 patients (63%) before surgery. The median tumor size and fundal CSF space (FCS) horizontal diameter were 17.7 mm (range: 3-52) and 3.2 mm (range: 0-11.1), respectively, with VS Koos grade III and IV were identified in 104 patients (55.6%). MRI revealed FSC presence in 125 (67.6%), T2-weighted hyperintensity in 83 (44.4%), brainstem compression in 78 (41.7%), and moderate to severe (>50% of the tumor bulk) heterogeneous gadolinium enhancement in 53 (28.8%) patients. The patients underwent surgery via translabyrinthine, retrosigmoid, and middle fossa approaches in 84 (44.9%), 65 (34.8%), and 38 (20.3%) cases, respectively. Intraoperative facial nerve stimulation showed favorable responses in 138/179 patients (77.1%), while 20/59 patients (33.9%) maintained V-wave through auditory evoked potential (BAER) monitoring. Gross total resection (GTR) was achieved in 122 patients (65.2%), with facial and cochlear nerves being anatomically preserved in 182 (97.3%) and 96/133 (72.2%) patients, respectively. The facial nerve was functionally preserved in 137/187 (73.3%), 155/186 (83.3%), and 118/136 (86.8%) patients through early, short-term, and long-term postoperative examinations, respectively. Early and short-term facial nerve outcomes were worse in heterogeneous enhancing tumors, while favorable intraoperative facial nerve stimulation responses were the only independent predictor of higher functional preservation in logistic analysis (OR: 4.02, 95% CI: 1.76-9.14, p < 0.001, and OR: 3.63, 95% CI: 1.43-9.17, p = 0.006, respectively). Both the presence and larger diameter of FCS were independently associated with higher “early” facial nerve preservation (OR: 2.38, 95% CI: 1.11-5.09, p = 0.025). Long-term facial nerve outcome was better in patients with GTR (92.1% vs. 77.3% in GTR vs. non-GTR group, p = 0.025) and favorable stimulation responses (91.3% in favorable vs. 73.1% in unfavorable, p = 0.02). A serviceable hearing was preserved in 15/36 patients (41.7%) when attempted, with “insignificantly” higher rates in the presence of FCS and homogenous gadolinium enhancement.
Conclusions: A multidisciplinary surgical team can achieve favorable facial nerve and hearing outcomes in neuromonitoring-guided vestibular schwannoma surgery. Fundal CSF space in T2-Steady State sequences is a positive prognostic sign of “early” facial outcomes and should be considered in patient consultations. Larger case volume studies are warranted, though, to detect the radiologic prognostic factors of hearing outcomes.