Abstract

We describe the clinical findings in two patients with pathologically diagnosed olfactory neuroblastoma (ONB) of the sinonasal area and the surgical methods used for its treatment. Using an endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) without dura resection, along with radiotherapy, we successfully treated ONB at the Kadish stage A. One of our patients, however, experienced tumor recurrence 24 years after open surgery with radiotherapy that was conducted at another hospital. This patient was no longer eligible for radiotherapy, and the tumor was therefore resected with dura resection using an EEA combined with duraplasty. The dura resection with duraplasty using fascia lata and a pedicled nasal septal flap was minimally invasive. As with surgery without duraplasty, a postoperative computed tomography (CT) examination revealed that EEA with duraplasty led to quick improvement of the postoperative inflammatory response as well as pneumocranium. Here, we investigated whether to modify the method of surgery depending upon the primary site of early-stage ONB. We suggest that, in early-stage ONB, an endoscopic endonasal approach is an effective and less invasive method. It is also advisable to perform dura mater resection of the lesion site despite the absence of obvious intracranial invasions in image findings.

Highlights

  • Much progress has been made in the field of otolaryngology with regard to the use of endoscopic endonasal surgery

  • It has been reported that an extended endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA) is effective in the treatment of malignant sinonasal tumors such as olfactory neuroblastoma (ONB), chondrosarcoma, chordoma, early-stage squamous cell carcinoma, and adenocarcinoma [1]

  • A nonenhanced coronal computed tomography (CT) image showed a mass with a polyp-like appearance in the right nasal cavity, arising from the cribriform plate

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Summary

Introduction

Much progress has been made in the field of otolaryngology with regard to the use of endoscopic endonasal surgery. A biopsy of the nasal cavity (performed under local anesthesia) led to a diagnosis of ONB. A nonenhanced coronal computed tomography (CT) image showed a mass with a polyp-like appearance in the right nasal cavity, arising from the cribriform plate. An MRI with contrast enhancement on the T1-weighted coronal image (Figure 4(a)), PET-CT scanning, and localized findings (Figure 4(b)) 50 months after surgery showed no evidence of tumor recurrence. A coronal CT image showed the mass occupying the right anterior ethmoid sinus without a middle nasal turbinate. A contrast enhanced T1-weighted coronal image showed some enhancement within the lesion (Figure 5(d)). The tumor relapsed 24 years after the first-line treatment (open surgery plus radiation) which made radiotherapy impossible; surgery was performed with a dural biopsy and duraplasty using fascia lata plus a pedicled nasal septal flap.

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