DOI: 10.1097/mao.0000000000004495 ISSN: 1537-4505

Prospective Symptom Changes in Sporadic Vestibular Schwannoma: A Comparison of Observation, Microsurgery, and Radiosurgery

Karl R. Khandalavala, Christine M. Lohse, Nicole M. Tombers, Michael J. Link, Matthew L. Carlson

Objective

To compare differences in sporadic vestibular schwannoma (VS)–associated patient-reported symptom scores among patients receiving observation, microsurgery, or radiosurgery.

Study Design

Prospective longitudinal survey.

Setting

Tertiary referral center and the national Acoustic Neuroma Association.

Patients

Adults with sporadic VS.

Intervention

Observation, microsurgery, or radiosurgery.

Main Outcome Measure

Baseline and follow-up surveys on patient-reported severity of tinnitus, dizziness/imbalance, and headaches scored on a 10-point numeric scale, with higher scores indicating more severe symptoms; changes of 2 or more points from baseline were considered clinically important.

Results

A total of 455 patients were eligible for study with a mean (SD) follow-up of 4.5 (2.4) years, including 122 (27%) managed with observation, 226 (50%) undergoing microsurgery, and 107 (23%) undergoing radiosurgery. Changes in tinnitus severity scores differed significantly among management groups (p = 0.006), with severity scores increasing significantly in the radiosurgery (+0.8, p = 0.005) group but not in the observation (+0.2, p = 0.5) or microsurgery (−0.2, p = 0.18) groups. The changes in dizziness/imbalance and headache severity scores did not differ significantly among management groups. When comparing clinically important improvements (decrease of 2 or more points), the microsurgery and observation cohorts had a greater proportion of patients experiencing a clinically important improvement in tinnitus compared with the radiosurgery cohort; no other clinically important changes were significantly different among management groups.

Conclusions

In this prospective study of 455 patients comparing patient-reported symptoms after VS management, radiosurgery was associated with worsening tinnitus severity scores overall and resulted in fewer patients reporting clinically important improvements in tinnitus compared with observation and microsurgery. As there was substantial variability in the effect of management modality on changes in symptom severity scores, possible treatment effects on subjective symptoms, including tinnitus, dizziness/imbalance, and headache, should not be used in isolation to inform clinical decision-making for management of sporadic VS.

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