Abstract

Introduction and objectiveThe treatment of cholesteatoma is surgical in most cases. When it is indicated, it is preferable to choose a reconstructive surgical technique with the dual purpose of eradicating the disease and preserving or improving the patient's hearing. In 2017, the European Academy of Otology and Neuro-Otology/Japanese Otological Society (EAONO/JOS) published a new cholesteatoma classification. The aims of this study are to determine the influence of the surgical technique use and this classification on patient's hearing outcomes. MethodsA retrospective study that include patients who underwent reconstructive surgery of cholesteatoma between 2012 and 2017 is carried out. Based on pre-surgical computed tomography (CT) images, disease is staged according to the EAONO/JOS classification. Hearing outcomes obtained by pre and postoperative pure tone audiometry are analysed according to the surgical technique used and according to the stage of the disease. Results143 patients with no statistically significant differences in hearing thresholds before surgery are included. One year after surgery, all the patients’ airbone pure tone average (PTA) and mean differential auditory threshold have improved significantly (P = .01 and P = .001). Those patients who undergo tympanoplasty with two-stage canal wall up mastoidectomy presente better postsurgical air PTA and postsurgical mean differential auditory threshold outcomes (P=.007 and P=.014) than those patients who underwent tympanoplasty with canal wall down mastoidectomy. Moreover, the patients who underwent tympanoplasty with two-stage canal wall up mastoidectomy had improved airbone PTA and mean differential auditory threshold one year after the surgery with statistical significance (P=.001 and P=.013). The mean differential auditory threshold is also better (P=.008) in the patients who undergo tympanoplasty with canal wall down mastoidectomy one year after the procedure. ConclusionsReconstructive surgical techniques improve hearing one year after surgery. In our study, this improvement is significantly greater with tympanoplasty with two-stage canal wall up mastoidectomy.

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