• World Neurosurg · Oct 2015

    The Expanding Spectrum of Disease Treated by the Transnasal, Transsphenoidal Microscopic and Endoscopic Anterior Skull Base Approach: A Single-Center Experience 2008-2015.

    • David J Cote, Robert Wiemann, Timothy R Smith, Ian F Dunn, Ossama Al-Mefty, and Edward R Laws.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    • World Neurosurg. 2015 Oct 1;84(4):899-905.

    IntroductionThe transsphenoidal approach was initially developed in neurosurgical practice as an operative approach to the pituitary gland. The introduction of the operating endoscope has improved the versatility of the transsphenoidal approach, broadening the spectrum of lesions that can be treated effectively with this operative strategy.MethodsWe performed a retrospective review of all patients who underwent transnasal, transsphenoidal operations at Brigham and Women's Hospital from April 2008 to February 2015 and categorized each case by pathologic diagnosis.ResultsA total of 792 transnasal, transsphenoidal operations (512 endoscopic) were performed by 9 neurosurgeons for 33 pathologies over a 7-year period. Pituitary adenomas (535, 67.55%) were the most common impetus for a transsphenoidal operation. Others included Rathke cleft cysts (86, 10.86%), craniopharyngiomas (25, 3.16%), lympocytic hypophysitis/pituitary inflammation (21, 2.65%), arachnoid cysts (8, 1.01%), spindle cell oncocytoma (4, 0.51%), colloid cysts (4, 0.51%), and pituicytoma (2, 0.25%). Pituitary hyperplasia was treated in 9 cases (1.14%) and pituitary apoplexy in 7 (0.88%). Nineteen operations were undertaken for postoperative repairs (2.40%) and 3 for abscesses (0.38%). Other diseases treated transsphenoidally included chordomas (12, 1.52%), metastases (9, 1.14%), meningiomas (5, 0.63%), clival lesions (4, 0.51%), germinomas (3, 0.38%), granulomas (2, 0.25%), dermoid tumors (2, 0.25%), and 1 (0.13%) each of esthesioneuroblastoma, granular cell tumor, Wegener granulomatosis, olfactory neuroblastoma, glioneuronal tumor, chondromyxoid fibroma, epidermoid, meningoencephalocele, aneurysm, neuroendocrine carcinoma, chondrosarcoma, and lymphoma.ConclusionsAlthough initially devised in neurosurgical practice for tumors of the pituitary gland, developments in technology now make the transsphenoidal approach an effective operative strategy for a wide range of anterior skull base lesions.Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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