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Experience and Balance: Long-Term Trends in Preferred Skull Base Approach for a Case Series of Cavernous Malformation Resections
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Experience and Balance: Long-Term Trends in Preferred Skull Base Approach for a Case Series of Cavernous Malformation Resections

Diego A. Devia, Christopher S. Graffeo, Dimitri Benner, Lea Scherschinski, George Thomas, Stefan W. Koester, Visish M. Srinivasan and Michael T. Lawton
Operative neurosurgery (Hagerstown, Md.), Vol.25(1), pp.33-40
07/2023
PMID: 37083737

Abstract

Clinical Neurology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Neurosciences & Neurology Science & Technology Surgery
BACKGROUND:Skull base approaches are a foundation of modern cerebrovascular surgery; however, their application over time has varied.OBJECTIVE:To assess trends in skull base approach selection for cavernous malformation (CM) resection.METHODS:This is a retrospective case series of all first-time CM resections by a single surgeon from 1997 to 2021. Cases were classified by craniotomy and approach. Four sets of common comparator skull base approaches were identified by coauthor consensus: pterional and orbitozygomatic; retrosigmoid, extended retrosigmoid (xRS), and far-lateral; suboccipital and torcular; and trans-cerebellar peduncle (MCP) and transcerebellopontine angle. Counts were binned by 5-year or 10-year clusters for descriptive statistical assessment of temporal trends.RESULTS:In total, 372 primary CM resections met the study criteria and were included. Orbitozygomatic approach use increased during the second 5-year period, after which the pterional approach rapidly became and remained the preferred approach. During the first two 5-year periods, the far-lateral approach was preferred to the retrosigmoid and xRS approaches, but the xRS approach grew in popularity and accounted for >50% of operations in this comparator group. Trans-MCP use compared with the transcerebellopontine angle approach closely mirrored the change in xRS use. The midline suboccipital approach accounted for a larger proportion (range, 62%-88%) of cases than the torcular approach (range, 12%-38%) across all periods.CONCLUSION:The xRS and trans-MCP approaches have been increasingly used over time, while the orbitozygomatic and far-lateral approaches have become less common. These trends seem to reflect versatility, efficiency, and safety of these techniques.

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