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Incidental Histopathologic Finding of Sinonasal Inverted Papilloma Among Surgically Excised Polyps Increases the Risk of Tumor Recurrence
Author(s) -
Franklin MariñoSánchez,
Gonzalo de los Santos,
Ana Giribet,
A Leonardo Aguirre,
Javier Alonso,
Daniel Wansley,
Ignacio Cobeta
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
indian journal of otolaryngology and head and neck surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.229
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 2231-3796
pISSN - 0973-7707
DOI - 10.1007/s12070-018-1302-y
Subject(s) - medicine , inverted papilloma , otorhinolaryngology , malignancy , biopsy , nasal polyps , pathological , surgery , papilloma , endoscopy , retrospective cohort study , radiology , pathology
Inverted papilloma (IP) is a benign tumor remarkable for its tendency toward recurrence. Local relapse implicates incomplete resection concerning the bone adjacent to tumor base. The high false negative rates on biopsies, mainly when nasal polyps coexist, may affect the surgical management and outcomes. Our objective was to study the impact of preoperative histologic diagnosis in IP recurrence, particularly in patients with pre-surgical diagnosis of inflammatory polyps. A retrospective analysis of 62 patients treated for IP was conducted. Demographic data and information about smoking status, alcohol intake, tumor location, histology, presence of nasal polyps, staging, malignancy, previous biopsies and surgical approach were evaluated to identify factors associated with recurrence. Prevalence of nasal polyps was higher in patients with recurrence. Smoking history, alcohol abuse, staging, histologic type, malignancy and surgical approach were not associated with recurrence. The presence of nasal polyps at endoscopy was inversely associated with the diagnosis of IP at incisional biopsy. Incidental histologic diagnosis of IP after surgery increased the risk of recurrence more than tenfold. Biopsy reporting the diagnosis of IP previous to surgery was inversely associated to recurrence. In patients with IP, coexistence of nasal polyps at initial endoscopy and lack of pathological IP diagnosis prior to surgery are strongly associated with a higher risk of recurrence. When excisional biopsy reports IP incidentally, an early revision surgery should be considered in order to avoid future aggressive surgeries because of tumor recurrence.

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