Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology (Oct 2023)

Multidisciplinary care improves outcomes for patients with carotid body paragangliomas—The UCLA experience

  • Kirsten Wong,
  • Kenric Tam,
  • Eric K. Tran,
  • Dipti Sajed,
  • Maie St. John

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/lio2.1130
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
pp. 1203 – 1209

Abstract

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Abstract Objective To evaluate the effects and outcomes of multidisciplinary surgical approaches in the management of carotid body tumors (CBT). Methods A single‐center retrospective study at the University of California—Los Angeles Medical Center was conducted on patients who presented with CBTs and underwent surgical resections from 1998 to 2020. Statistical analysis was performed using IBM SPSS v27 and Excel. Results A total of 75 patients with 79 CBT resections were included. Operating surgical subspecialties included: 41.8% vascular surgery, 24.1% otolaryngology head and neck surgeons (OHNS), and 31.6% combined OHNS and vascular. 68.4% of tumors underwent preoperative embolization. EBL was directly correlated with tumor size. CBT size was similar for OHNS (30 mm) and vascular (31 mm) but was significantly larger for combined OHNS and vascular cases (38 mm). EBL was higher in combined cases (301 mL) compared to OHNS (124 mL) or vascular (203 mL) alone. Incidence of postoperative cranial nerve deficits was 7.8%, with combined OHNS and vascular cases having an incidence of 4.0% when compared to OHNS (5.3%) versus vascular surgery alone (12.1%). Conclusion CBTs can be managed effectively by single surgical specialties with similar outcomes between vascular surgery and OHNS. In larger, higher grade tumors, however, a combined vascular and OHNS approach had lower incidence of postoperative cranial nerve injuries when compared to single specialty resections, despite a larger EBL. Thus, a multidisciplinary surgical approach suggests favorable outcomes with fewer incidence of cranial nerve deficits for larger, more complex CBT resections. Level of Evidence 2b—Individual retrospective cohort study.

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