Abstract
Endoscopic endonasal approaches to pediatric skull base lesions are rare, challenging, and present distinct considerations from adult pathology. In this study, we describe our endoscopic technical approach to various skull base lesions demonstrating the efficacy and nuances of these approaches in pediatric patients. Pediatric patients underwent endoscopic approach for skull base lesions from January of 2015 to April of 2021 were included in the study. Presenting symptoms, indications for surgery, surgical outcomes, intraoperative and postoperative complications, length of hospital stay, and length of follow-up were documented. A total of 18 patients (median age 12, age-range 1-15, 53% male) underwent 19 endoscopic transsphenoidal procedures. The pathologies included craniopharyngioma (N=5), biopsy for an unknown disease (n=2; orbital meningioma and pituitary lymphocytic hypophysitis), pituitary adenoma (N=2; ACTH-secreting and non-functional), Rathke's cleft cyst (n=2), CSF leak repairs (n=2; post-traumatic and spontaneous meningocele), juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma (n=3, 1 patient had 2 procedures) and rhabdomyosarcoma (n=1). GTR was achieved in 11 out of 15 procedures (73.3%). Out of 10 patients with a sellar lesion, 6 patients had intraoperative CSF leak (60%). No patients experienced post-operative CSF leak. The median follow-up for all patients was 14 months (1-36 months). Anterior and middle skull base pathology in pediatric patients can be effectively operated via an endoscopic approach across a wide variety of patient ages and conditions. Minimally invasive techniques with middle turbinate and nasal septum preservation can be achieved without compromising outcomes. A wide variety of surgical repair strategies can be successfully utilized.
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More From: International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology
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