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Management of Cholesteatoma in the 21st Century

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Management of Cholesteatoma in the 21st Century John Rutka MD FRCSC Department of Otolaryngology University of Toronto Mastoid Misery Index (Why mastoidectomy surgery ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Management of Cholesteatoma in the 21st Century


1
Management of Cholesteatoma in the 21st Century
  • John Rutka MD FRCSC
  • Department of Otolaryngology
  • University of Toronto

2
Mastoid Misery Index(Why mastoidectomy surgery
fails)
  • Mucosal disease (incomplete epithelialization)
  • High facial ridge
  • Inadequate meatoplasty
  • Recurrent cholesteatoma

3
Question
  • Does surgery for cholesteatoma prevent
    complications from occurring?
  • Historical controls
  • Glasgow study (Nunez Browning, JLO 1990)

4
Complications TTH Experience 1987-97
  • From cholesteatoma
  • LSCC fistula - 13 pts (5.8)
  • Brain abscess / meningitis - 4 pts (1.8)
  • Facial paralysis - 4 pts (1.8)
  • SNHL - 6 pts (3)
  • Mastoiditis - 3 pts (1.5)

5
Complications TTH Experience 1987-97
  • Iatrogenic
  • Facial paralysis - 10 pts (5)
  • Brain herniation - 2 pts (1)
  • CSF leak - 1 pt (0.5)
  • Symptomatic fistula - 1pt (0.5)
  • Significant pain - 2pts (1)
  • Facts
  • all patients had 7th palsy on referral
  • surgery was 2xs more likely to cause facial
    paralysis than cholesteatoma

6
Controversies
  • When does a retraction pocket become a
    cholesteatoma? (The Friedberg Doctrine)
  • Does all cholesteatoma require surgery?

7
Thai Rural Ear Nose and Throat Foundation
  • Founded in 1972 by Dr Salyaveth Lekagul
  • gt100 000 patients assessed
  • gt4000 mastoidectomy procedures
  • gt7000 tympanoplasty procedures

8
Prevalence of ear disease from 1980-91
  • data collected from mobile ENT unit

9
Ear Disease in Thailand
  • data collected from mobile ENT unit

10
Why has ear disease decreased in Thailand?
  • 1972
  • Thailand had 26 ENT surgeons (25 were in Bangkok)
  • In the 70 provinces, there were no ENT surgeons
    or operating microscopes
  • Patients required to travel average 400 km for
    treatment

11
Why has ear disease decreased in Thailand?
  • 1998
  • There are now 500 ENT surgeons in Thailand
  • All provincial capitals have hospital with ENT
    surgeon and operating microscopes
  • Patients now travel less than 50 km

12
Why has ear disease decreased in Thailand?
  • Complete immunization programs nationwide /
    national health care
  • Better nutrition and little malnutrition
  • Transportation
  • District and community hospitals (600 hospitals,
    10-60 beds)
  • Better education / teaching about dangers of ear
    disease
  • - personal communication, Salyaveth Lekagul 1998

13
Risks of Developing an Otogenic Intracranial
Abscess
  • Annual risk with active CSOM is 1/10,000
  • 3xs more common in males
  • Lifetime risk of individual age 30 years with
    CSOM is 1/200
  • 5 abscesses occur in the immediate postoperative
    period
  • Nunez Browning 1990

14
Cholesteatoma Surgery
  • 225 Mastoidectomy procedures at TTH from 1987 -
    97
  • 188 pts - primary cholesteatoma
  • modified radical 134
  • radical 45
  • CAT 9
  • 37 pts- revision surgery (referred)
  • modified radical 25
  • radical 12

15
Revision Surgery (JAR)
  • 9 patients
  • mucosal disease - 5 patients
  • recurrent cholesteatoma - 2 patients
  • web formation - 1 patient
  • cholesterol granuloma - 1 patient
  • revision rate
  • 9 / 225 pts (4.0)
  • recurrence (recidivistic)
  • 2 / 225 pts (1)
  • hypotympanic cholesteatoma, petrous apex
    cholesteatoma

16
  • Over the past fifty years, there has been an
    apparent decline in
  • prevalence of cholesteatoma
  • surgery for cholesteatoma
  • intracranial complications (brain abscess,
    meningitis)
  • acute mastoiditis

17
  • Future challenges in cholesteatoma surgery in the
    21st century
  • intralabyrinthine / petrous apex disease
  • footplate / sinus tympani
  • childhood cholesteatoma

18
Childhood Cholesteatoma
  • Probability of recurrence
  • 40 at 10 years
  • Reasons
  • 40-50 of children have extensive pneumatization
  • infiltrating nature of cholesteatoma
  • less aggressive surgery performed
  • Gristwood 1979, Clinical Otolaryngology

19
Growth Rates of Cholesteatoma
  • Variations in growth potential of residual
    cellular elements
  • i.e. cholesteatoma doubling time attic (10
    months), mastoid (25 months)
  • Blood supply to matrix
  • Vascular factors / infection / growth factors /
    proteolytic enzymes
  • Anatomic factors (i.e. pneumatization)

20
Surgical Techniques
  • Open Procedures
  • atticotomy
  • modified radical mastoidectomy
  • attico-antrostomy
  • Bondy variant
  • radical mastoidectomy
  • Closed Procedures
  • combined approach tympanoplasty (canal wall up)
  • Mastoid obliteration

21
Surgical Management
  • High resolution CT preop
  • CO2 laser - footplate disease
  • Facial nerve monitoring

22
Cause for concern?
  • Declining incidence of cholesteatoma may mean
  • 1. Decreased recognition of disease
  • Will more complications arise as a result?
  • 2. Decreased surgical exposure
  • Can surgical skills be maintained?
  • 3. Decreased educational teaching (residency
    training)
  • Should mastoidectomy surgery be considered
    fellowship material?

23
Causes for Facial Paralysis
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