Abstract

Transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) represents the gold standard of pituitary adenoma resection, providing a safe and minimal invasive treatment for patients suffering from symptoms of mass effect. The aim of this study is to analyze the postoperative improvement of visual function after adenoma resection and to identify prognostic factors for the postoperative clinical recovery. We performed a retrospective analysis of all consecutive patients treated via a transsphenoidal approach for pituitary adenomas from April 2006 to December 2019 in a high-volume neurosurgical department. Our primary outcome was postoperative visual acuity and visual field impairment; the clinical findings were followed up to 3 months after surgery and correlated with clinical and radiographic findings. In total, 440 surgeries were performed in our department for tumors of the sella region in a time period of 13 years via transsphenoidal approach, and 191 patients included in the analysis. Mean age was 55 years, and 98% were macroadenomas. Mean preoperative visual acuity in patients with preoperative impairment (n = 133) improved significantly from 0.64/0.65 to 0.72/0.75 and 0.76/0.8 (right eye R/left eye L) postoperatively and at 3 months follow-up (p < 0.001). Visual acuity significantly depended on Knosp classification but not Hardy grading. The strongest predictor for visual function recovery was age. Transsphenoidal pituitary tumor resection remains a safe and effective treatment in patients with preoperative visual impairment. It significantly improves visual acuity and field defects after surgery, and recovery continues at the 3 months follow-up examination.

Highlights

  • Pituitary adenomas present benign lesions with a close spatial relationship to the optic chiasm

  • Our study aims to review the postoperative outcome of patients suffering from visual deficits and identify prognostic factors influencing the improvement, stagnation, or even worsening of visual acuity postoperatively and at 3 months follow-up

  • We provide detailed data on the postoperative visual outcome of patients suffering from sellar tumors treated via Transsphenoidal surgery (TSS) for visual impairment

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Summary

Introduction

Pituitary adenomas present benign lesions with a close spatial relationship to the optic chiasm. Factors influencing the postoperative outcome as well as the complication rate include age [14, 32, 35], body mass index (BMI) [9], number of surgeries [15], and the surgical approach used [18, 29, 34] as well as tumor size and sinus suprasellar growth [16]. The visual postoperative outcome and recovery are known to be favorable, influencing factors are currently discussed such as preoperative deficits, tumor size und tumor location, age, duration of symptoms, und tumor recurrence [6, 22, 31]

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