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DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1633518
Patient Survival after Temporal Bone Resection for Malignancy
Authors
Objective Analyze factors which contributed to overall and disease-free survival in patients who underwent temporal bone resection for malignancy.
Methods We performed a retrospective chart review with patient data collection for all patients who underwent temporal bone resection at the LSU Medical Center, including two hospitals: Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center and University Medical Center; from 2007 to present.
Results A total of 38 temporal bone resections were performed on 36 patients. The most common pathology was squamous cell carcinoma (55.26%), and 52.6% of patients presented with recurrent disease. Average age at the time of resection was 68.8 years and the most common primary tumor site was pre-auricular skin. 34 patients underwent lateral temporal bone resection and 4 patients underwent subtotal temporal bone resection. 76.3% of patients had a neck dissection, 84.2% of patients had a parotidectomy, and 18.4% of patients had a condylectomy. Nine patients had previously been treated with radiation and 20 patients received postoperative adjuvant radiation.
Two-year overall survival (OS) for patients with T2 staging was 37.5%, T3 was 60%, and T4 was 38.5%. When excluding palliative resections, T4 2-year OS was 50%. 2-year disease-free survival (DFS) for T2 staging was 33.3%, T3 was 60%, and T4 was 15.4%. 25 patients (67.6%) had perineural invasion, 19 patients (51.3%) were found to have facial nerve involvement, and 32.4% of patients had nodal disease at presentation. 2-year OS for temporal bone primary was 62.5% and DFS was 50%. For skin primary, 2-year OS was 43.8% and DFS was 27.5%. For parotid primary, 2-year OS and DFS was 0%. Kaplan−Meier graphs were calculated for all variables and multivariate analysis was performed.
All defects were reconstructed. The most common flap used was the anterior lateral thigh free flap (39.4%) followed by the temporalis flap (28.9%). There was one local flap failure, and all free tissue flaps survived. The most common complication was wound infection (13.1%), followed by CSF leak (5.2%).
Conclusion Patient survival after temporal bone resection has improved over the last half century, and can be related to certain positive and negative prognostic factors. Overall survival and disease-free survival rates were comparable to those previously described in the literature. Patients with primaries of nontemporal bone origin tended toward worse overall and disease-free survival rates.
Publication History
Publication Date:
02 February 2018 (online)
© 2018. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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