Upfront radiation for small, nongrowing vestibular schwannomas: a call for caution.
Abstract
The management of small vestibular schwannomas (VS) with serviceable hearing remains controversial. While stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) achieves high tumor control rates, its routine use for nongrowing, asymptomatic tumors may represent overtreatment. Decades of natural history data demonstrate that more than half of small or intracanalicular VSs remain radiographically stable for 10 years or longer, and many patients report high satisfaction with observation. Although SRS offers short-term hearing preservation, long-term outcomes show progressive decline, with fewer than half of patients maintaining serviceable hearing at five years and even fewer beyond a decade. Radiation also introduces potential late toxicities and complicates subsequent microsurgical salvage. Observation, by contrast, defers unnecessary intervention while preserving future treatment options and quality of life. For small, stable VSs, evidence supports a "wait-and-scan" strategy as the safest, most patient-centered initial management approach, reserving SRS or microsurgery for documented tumor progression or symptomatic deterioration.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 시술 | microsurgery
|
미세수술 | dict | 1 |
MeSH Terms
Humans; Neuroma, Acoustic; Radiosurgery; Treatment Outcome; Quality of Life; Microsurgery
🔗 함께 등장하는 도메인
이 논문이 속한 카테고리와 같은 논문에서 자주 함께 다뤄지는 카테고리들
관련 논문
- Endodontic implications of hypercementosis: A systematic review of anatomical challenges and therapeutic strategies.
- Breast plastic surgery in perimenopausal and postmenopausal women: Menopause-informed counseling on screening, safety, and long-term breast health.
- Application of the SCIA-Pure Skin Perforator Flap in Bilateral Upper Eyelid Reconstruction: A Case Report and Review of the Literature.
- Free flap reconstruction of a cast-related pressure ulcer in a pediatric patient with spinal muscular atrophy.
- Characterization of Trimmed Nerve Morphology Using High-Resolution Imaging: Comparison of Three Surgical Instruments.