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DOI: 10.1097/00006123-199608000-00005
OpenAccess: Closed
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Conservative Management of Acoustic Neuroma: An Outcome Study

H. Gordon Deen,Michael J. Ebersold,Stephen G. Harner,Charles W. Beatty,Mitchell S. Marion,Robert E. Wharen,J D Green,Lynn M. Quast

Medicine
Asymptomatic
Neurofibromatosis
1996
OBJECTIVE: This study analyzed selection criteria, clinical outcome, and tumor growth rates in patients with acoustic neuromas in whom the initial management strategy was observation. METHODS: A retrospective review of patients with conservatively managed unilateral acoustic neuromas was conducted. Minimum follow-up was 6 months. Patients with neurofibromatosis Type II were excluded. Differences in tumor growth rates were analyzed by use of the Wilcoxon rank sum test. RESULTS: Sixty-eight patients (31 men and 37 women) with a mean age of 67.1 years were followed for an average of 3.4 years after diagnosis. The reasons for a trial of observation included advanced age (55%), patient preference (21%), minimal symptoms (9%), poor general medical condition (7%), asymptomatic tumor(4%), and tumor in the only hearing ear (4%). Fifty-eight patients (85%) were successfully managed with observation alone. Ten patients (15%) ultimately required treatment (nine received microsurgical treatment and one patient underwent radiosurgical intervention) at a mean time interval of 4.0 year after diagnosis. Forty-eight tumors (71%) showed no growth and 20 (29%) enlarged during the study period. The mean tumor growth rate at the 1-year follow-up was significantly higher in the group requiring treatment (3.0 mm) than in the group not requiring treatment (0.36 mm) (P < 0.0001). Thus, the tumor growth rate at the 1-year follow-up was a strong predictor of the eventual need for treatment. CONCLUSION: Observation is a reasonable management strategy in carefully selected patients with acoustic neuromas. Diligent follow-up with serial magnetic resonance imaging is recommended, because some tumors will enlarge to the point at which active treatment is required.
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    Conservative Management of Acoustic Neuroma: An Outcome Study” is a paper by H. Gordon Deen Michael J. Ebersold Stephen G. Harner Charles W. Beatty Mitchell S. Marion Robert E. Wharen J D Green Lynn M. Quast published in 1996. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.