AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates cochlear implantation outcomes after vestibular schwannoma (VS) surgery, focusing on the differences in results between patients with sporadic VS and those with neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2).
  • Seventeen patients were analyzed, revealing that 77.8% of them actively used their cochlear implants, with an overall median postoperative pure tone average of 45.6 dB nHL at 24 months.
  • The findings indicate that having good hearing in the ear opposite to the implant negatively impacts the cochlear implant's effectiveness, suggesting this should be considered in patient selection for the procedure.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To describe our institutional experience in cochlear implantation after vestibular schwannoma (VS) resection, and compare the audiological outcomes between sporadic and neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) VS sub-cohorts of patients, and in relation to preoperative contralateral hearing.

Methods: Seventeen patients (8 sporadic and 9 NF2-associated VSs) who had undergone VS resection and cochlear implant (CI) were analyzed retrospectively. Audiological outcomes at 24 months were correlated with preoperative clinical variables. The results according to VS type (sporadic vs. NF2-associated) and contralateral hearing (impaired vs. normal) were compared.

Results: Fourteen CIs were actively used by the patients (77.8%). Twenty-four months after CI activation, the median postoperative PTA (pure tone average) was 45.6 dB nHL and a measurable WRS (Word Recognition Score) was achieved by 44.4% of patients (median WRS = 40%). The median postoperative PTA in the implanted ear resulted better in the group with an impaired contralateral hearing (36.3 dB nHL vs. 78.8 dB nHL, p = 0.019). Good preoperative contralateral hearing status (A-B classes of AAO-HNS) was a negative prognostic factor for CI performance on open-set discrimination (OR = 28.0, 95% CI 2.07-379.25, p = 0.012).

Conclusions: CI is a viable rehabilitative option for patients with sporadic or NF2-associated VS. A good contralateral hearing adversely affects CI outcome and should be taken into consideration for patients' selection and rehabilitation programs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00405-021-07243-0DOI Listing

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