
Endoscopic surgery for malignant sinonasal tumours: an eighteen year experience
Author(s) -
Valerie J. Lund,
William I. Wei
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
rhinology (amsterdam. online)/rhinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.275
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1996-8604
pISSN - 0300-0729
DOI - 10.4193/rhino14.318
Subject(s) - medicine , esthesioneuroblastoma , malignancy , surgery , craniofacial , radiation therapy , cohort , natural history , adenocarcinoma , paranasal sinuses , cancer , psychiatry
Curative resection of malignant tumours of the skull base is increasingly undertaken endoscopically. Hitherto the diverse histology, rarity and long natural history have made it difficult to accrue statistically robust cohorts for comparison with conventional craniofacial resection. It is now possible to make such a comparison in a large personal cohort. Method: Data on all cases of sinonasal malignancy undergoing endoscopic resection with curative intent over an eighteen year period were collected prospectively and analysed for survival and prognostic factors. Results: There were 140 cases, 68 men and 72 women, aged 20-92 years (mean 63 yrs). Follow-up ranged from 6-184 months (mean 60 months). Eighteen different histopathologies were represented with olfactory neuroblastoma (36), malignant melanoma (33) and adenocarcinoma (19) being the commonest. Additional radiotherapy was given in 95 cases and chemotherapy in 49. Overall survival is 84% at 5 years and 69% at 10 years. Overall disease-free survival was 77% at 5 years and 56% at ten. Overall and disease-free survival at 5 (and 10) years is, respectively, 97% and 90% for olfactory neuroblastoma, 79% and 68% for adenocarcinoma and 56% and 39% for malignant melanoma. Conclusion: These results show that endoscopic resection is an alternative to conventional craniofacial resection in selected cases.