Abstract
Context The effect on recurrence rate between patients with juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma
(JNA), treated by an endoscopic versus open approach, has not been well established.
Objective A meta-analysis of the available literature concerning recurrence rate in patients
who underwent surgery for JNA.
Methods A retrospective meta-analysis of studies analyzing recurrence rate after endoscopic
or open surgery for patients with JNA was performed using the DerSimonian–Laird random-effects
method. English and non-English articles were reviewed using Embase, Medline, and
Cochrane databases.
Results Among nine studies, including 362 patients from 1981 to 2015, with a mean follow-up
of 49.4 months, a total of 89 patients (24.5%) had recurrence. Our analysis revealed
a total effect size of −0.16 in favor of endoscopic approach (−0.25 to −0.06, CI [confidence
interval] 95%). When analyzing tumor by stage (Radkowski's IA–IIIB n = 299), the endoscopic approach proved to be superior independent of tumor stage
(2 vs. 17% for tumors stage IA–IIA, and 26 vs. 32% for tumor stage IIB–IIIB for endoscopic
and open approaches respectively; p < 0.05). The endoscopic approach has a statistical significant lower recurrence rate
in patients without intracranial compromise when compared with the open approach (13
vs. 28%; p < 0.02). No statistical difference was seen in patients with intracranial compromise
(p = 0.5)
Conclusion The use of an endoscopic approach to treat JNA has a significantly lower recurrence
rate when compared with open approaches. Independent of disease stage, an endoscopic
approach should be the standard of care to surgically treat JNA. For cases with intracranial
compromise, either approach can be used for surgical resection.
Keywords
juvenile nasopharyngeal angiofibroma - skull base neoplasm - endoscopic anterior skull
base resection - craniofacial approach to the skull base - endoscopic endonasal surgery
- neoplasm recurrence - treatment outcome