ObjectiveTo investigate the potential to reduce the cochlear dose with robotic photon radiosurgery or intensity-modulated proton therapy planning for vestibular schwannomas.Materials and... Show moreObjectiveTo investigate the potential to reduce the cochlear dose with robotic photon radiosurgery or intensity-modulated proton therapy planning for vestibular schwannomas.Materials and MethodsClinically delivered photon radiosurgery treatment plans were compared to five cochlear-optimized plans: one photon and four proton plans (total of 120). A 1x12 Gy dose was prescribed. Photon plans were generated with Precision (Cyberknife, Accuray) with no PTV margin for set-up errors. Proton plans were generated using an in-house automated multi-criterial planning system with three or nine-beam arrangements, and applying 0 or 3 mm robustness for set-up errors during plan optimization and evaluation (and 3 % range robustness). The sample size was calculated based on a reduction of cochlear Dmean > 1.5 Gy(RBE) from the clinical plans, and resulted in 24 patients.ResultsCompared to the clinical photon plans, a reduction of cochlear Dmean > 1.5 Gy(RBE) could be achieved in 11/24 cochlear-optimized photon plans, 4/24 and 6/24 cochlear-optimized proton plans without set-up robustness for three and nine-beam arrangement, respectively, and in 0/24 proton plans with set-up robustness. The cochlea could best be spared in cases with a distance between tumor and cochlea. Using nine proton beams resulted in a reduced dose to most organs at risk.ConclusionCochlear dose reduction is possible in vestibular schwannoma radiosurgery while maintaining tumor coverage, especially when the tumor is not adjacent to the cochlea. With current set-up robustness, proton therapy is capable of providing lower dose to organs at risk located distant to the tumor, but not for organs adjacent to it. Consequently, photon plans provided better cochlear sparing than proton plans. Show less
ObjectiveTo review the literature on intratympanic gentamicin treatment as prehabilitation for patients undergoing surgery for a unilateral vestibular schwannoma.Data sourcesA systematic literature... Show moreObjectiveTo review the literature on intratympanic gentamicin treatment as prehabilitation for patients undergoing surgery for a unilateral vestibular schwannoma.Data sourcesA systematic literature search was conducted up to March 2023 in Pubmed, Embase, Cochrane, Web of Science, Academic Search Premier, Google Scholar and Emcare databases.Review methodsArticles on the effect of intratympanic gentamicin followed by vestibular schwannoma surgery were reviewed. Data on objective vestibular function and subjective outcomes were compiled in tables for analysis. Relevance and methodological quality were assessed with the methodological index for non-randomized tool.ResultsA total of 281 articles were identified. After screening and exclusion of duplicates, 13 studies were reviewed for eligibility, of which 4 studies could be included in the review. The posturography test, the subjective visual horizontal test, and the optokinetic nystagmus test showed decreased vestibular function in the group of patients who received intratympanic gentamicin before microsurgery compared to the group of patients without gentamicin. Other objective tests did not show significant differences between patient groups. Subjective vestibular outcomes, as evaluated by questionnaires on quality of life and/or dizziness, did not seem to improve from intratympanic gentamicin pretreatment.ConclusionVestibular schwannoma patients who received intratympanic gentamicin before surgical resection of the tumor performed better in the posturography test, subjective visual horizontal test, and the optokinetic nystagmus test afterwards. However, studies that also evaluated subjective outcomes such as dizziness, anxiety, depression, and balance self-confidence did not show a positive effect of intratympanic gentamicin on the vestibular complaints and symptoms. Show less
Objective The aim of this study was to assess the ability to smile following a hypoglossal-facial nerve transfer (N12-N7).Design This is a retrospective chart review.Setting National tertiary... Show moreObjective The aim of this study was to assess the ability to smile following a hypoglossal-facial nerve transfer (N12-N7).Design This is a retrospective chart review.Setting National tertiary referral center for skull base pathology.Participants Seventeen patients.Main Outcome Measures The ability to smile following an N12-N7 transfer was assessed by five medical doctors on photographs of the whole face and frontal, orbital, and oral segments. The (segmented) photographs were scored for the symmetry, asymmetry, and correct or incorrect assessment of the affected side.Results Seventeen patients were analyzed by 5 assessors providing 85 assessments. The whole face at rest was judged symmetrical in 26% of the cases and mildly asymmetrical in 56%. Frontal, orbital, and oral segments were symmetrical in 63, 20, and 35%, respectively. The affected side was correctly identified in 76%. When smiling, the whole face was symmetrical in 6% and mildly asymmetric in 59%. The affected side was correctly identified in 94%. The frontal, orbital, and oral segments during smiling were symmetrical in 67, 15, and 6%, respectively. The affected side of the frontal, orbital, and buccal facial segments during smiling was correctly identified in 89, 89, and 96%, respectively. Interobserver variability with Fleiss' kappa analysis showed that the strength of the agreement during smile of the total face was good (0.771)Conclusions Following an N12-N7 transfer, a good facial symmetry at rest can be achieved. During smiling, almost all patients showed asymmetry of the face, which was predominantly determined by the orbital and oral segments. To improve the ability to smile after an N12-N7 transfer, additional procedures are needed. Show less
ObjectiveValidation of automated 2-dimensional (2D) diameter measurements of vestibular schwannomas on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Study DesignRetrospective validation study using 2 data sets... Show moreObjectiveValidation of automated 2-dimensional (2D) diameter measurements of vestibular schwannomas on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Study DesignRetrospective validation study using 2 data sets containing MRIs of vestibular schwannoma patients. SettingUniversity Hospital in The Netherlands. MethodsTwo data sets were used, 1 containing 1 scan per patient (n = 134) and the other containing at least 3 consecutive MRIs of 51 patients, all with contrast-enhanced T1 or high-resolution T2 sequences. 2D measurements of the maximal extrameatal diameters in the axial plane were automatically derived from a 3D-convolutional neural network compared to manual measurements by 2 human observers. Intra- and interobserver variabilities were calculated using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), agreement on tumor progression using Cohen's kappa. ResultsThe human intra- and interobserver variability showed a high correlation (ICC: 0.98-0.99) and limits of agreement of 1.7 to 2.1 mm. Comparing the automated to human measurements resulted in ICC of 0.98 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.974; 0.987) and 0.97 (95% CI: 0.968; 0.984), with limits of agreement of 2.2 and 2.1 mm for diameters parallel and perpendicular to the posterior side of the temporal bone, respectively. There was satisfactory agreement on tumor progression between automated measurements and human observers (Cohen's & kappa; = 0.77), better than the agreement between the human observers (Cohen's & kappa; = 0.74). ConclusionAutomated 2D diameter measurements and growth detection of vestibular schwannomas are at least as accurate as human 2D measurements. In clinical practice, measurements of the maximal extrameatal tumor (2D) diameters of vestibular schwannomas provide important complementary information to total tumor volume (3D) measurements. Combining both in an automated measurement algorithm facilitates clinical adoption. Show less
(1) Background: This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy and treatment-related toxicity of proton radiotherapy (PRT) for vestibular schwannoma (VS) in patients with neurofibromatosis type 2... Show more(1) Background: This study aimed to evaluate the efficacy and treatment-related toxicity of proton radiotherapy (PRT) for vestibular schwannoma (VS) in patients with neurofibromatosis type 2-related schwannomatosis (NF2). (2) Methods: Consecutive NF2 patients treated with PRT for VS between 2004 and 2016 were retrospectively evaluated, focusing on tumor volume, facial and trigeminal nerve function, hearing, tinnitus, vestibular symptoms, and the need for salvage therapy after PRT. (3) Results: Eight patients were included (median age 36 years, 50% female). Median follow-up was 71 months. Five (63%) patients received fractionated PRT and three (38%) received PRT radiosurgery for VS. Six patients (75%) received prior VS surgery; three also received bevacizumab. Six patients (75%) did not require salvage therapy after PRT. Two patients (25%) with residual hearing lost it after PRT, and six had already lost ipsilateral hearing prior to PRT. Tumor and treatment-related morbidity could be evaluated in six patients. Following PRT, conditions that occurred or worsened were: facial paresis in five (83%), trigeminal hypoesthesia in two (33%), tinnitus in two (33%), and vestibular symptoms in four patients (67%). (4) Conclusion: After PRT for VS, the majority of the NF2 patients in the cohort did not require additional therapy. Tumor and/or treatment-related cranial nerve deficits were common. This is at least partly explained by the use of PRT as a salvage treatment after surgery or bevacizumab, in the majority of cases. There remains the further opportunity to elucidate the efficacy and toxicity of proton radiotherapy as a primary treatment. Show less
Objective. This study evaluates the natural course of hearing loss (HL) prior to treatment in patients with progressive tumors and an indication for active intervention. Evaluating this patient... Show moreObjective. This study evaluates the natural course of hearing loss (HL) prior to treatment in patients with progressive tumors and an indication for active intervention. Evaluating this patient group specifically can put hearing outcomes after vestibular schwannoma therapy into an adequate context.Study Design. Retrospective cohort study.Setting. Tertiary referral center.Methods. Inclusion criteria comprised unilateral vestibular schwannomas prior to active treatment, with >= 2 mm extracanalicular (EC) tumor growth and >= 2 audiograms. We performed a comprehensive assessment of hearing using multiple outcome parameters including (the annual decrease in) pure-tone averages (PTAs; an average of 0.5, 1, 2, and 3 kHz). Predictors for HL were evaluated (patient age, tumor size/progression, follow-up duration, baseline hearing).Results. At presentation, 86% of patients suffered from sensorineural HL on the affected side (>= 20 dB PTA) with a median of 39 dB (interquartile rate [IQR]: 27-51 dB). The median follow-up duration was 21 months (IQR: 13-34 months), after which 58% (187/322) of patients experienced progressive HL (>= 10 dB), with a median increase of 6.4 dB/year. At the last follow-up, the median PTA was 56 dB (IQR: 37-73). Median speech discrimination scores deteriorated from 90% (IQR: 70%-100%) to 65% (IQR: 35%-100%). Tumor progression (maximal EC diameter) was significantly correlated to the progression of sensorineural HL, corrected for follow-up (F(2,228) = 10.4, p < .001, R-2 = 8%).Conclusion. The majority of patients (58%) with radiologically confirmed progressive vestibular schwannomas experience progressive sensorineural HL during observation. Tumor progression rate, EC tumor extension, and longer follow-up are factors associated with more sensorineural HL. Show less
Objective: To analyze the effect of dizziness-related symptoms on the long-term quality of life (QoL) of patients with unilateral vestibular schwannoma. Methods: In this cross-sectional study,... Show moreObjective: To analyze the effect of dizziness-related symptoms on the long-term quality of life (QoL) of patients with unilateral vestibular schwannoma. Methods: In this cross-sectional study, patients with a unilateral vestibular schwannoma diagnosed between 2004 and 2013 completed a disease-specific QoL questionnaire (Penn Acoustic Neuroma Quality of Life [PANQOL]) and the Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) in 2020. Linear regression was performed to assess the correlation between QoL and the DHI total score, and the scores of the DHI functional, emotional, and physical subdomains. Potential confounders such as age, sex, tumor size at baseline, and treatment modality (active surveillance, surgery, or radiotherapy) were included in the model. Results: In total, 287 of 479 patients (59%) experienced dizziness with a median follow-up of 10 years. The DHI total score was significantly associated with the PANQOL total score. On average, we found a reduction of 0.7 points on the PANQOL for each additional point on the DHI. The DHI emotional subdomain was the most prominent determinant of poorer QoL. Each point on the DHI emotional subscale was associated with a reduction of 1.3 on the PANQOL score. Treatment modality did not have a clinically relevant effect on dizziness-related QoL. Conclusions: Even mild dizziness can have a significant and clinically relevant effect on the QoL of patients with unilateral vestibular schwannoma in the long term. This holds true for all treatment modalities. Addressing the vestibular problems may improve QoL in vestibular schwannoma patients, and DHI subscale analysis may help tailor the optimal vestibular intervention. Show less
Objective: In vestibular schwannoma patients, a loss of signal intensity (SI) on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been reported within the ipsilateral labyrinth. The purpose of this... Show moreObjective: In vestibular schwannoma patients, a loss of signal intensity (SI) on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has been reported within the ipsilateral labyrinth. The purpose of this study was to quantitatively evaluate the occurrence and course of this intensity loss in relation to proton radiotherapy and its possible association with hearing loss. Study Design: Retrospective chart review. Setting: Tertiary referral center. Patients: Patients who received proton therapy for a vestibular schwannoma and underwent at least two high-resolution T2-weighted cisternographic sequence (constructive interference in steady state/fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition/DRIVE) MRIs and audiometry assessments. Main Outcome Measures: Relative T2 SIs from the vestibules and basal/apical cochlear turns of the labyrinth, bilaterally.ResultsNinety-five MRI scans from 34 patients were included. The apical turn of the ipsilateral cochlea showed a lower mean cochlear SI than on the contralateral side (+/- 3.5 versus 5.0). The mean relative cochlear SI did not significantly change after proton radiotherapy. The ipsilateral vestibule showed a higher SI than the cochlea. The relative mean cochlear SI was not directly correlated to (the degree of) hearing loss before or after proton radiotherapy, nor did it predict future hearing loss. Conclusion: The relative mean cochlear SI on cisternographic T2-MRI in vestibular schwannoma patients is diminished on the treated side, when compared with the ipsilateral vestibule and the contralateral cochlea/vestibule. The SI of the ipsilateral cochlea does not further decrease after proton radiotherapy and seems to be related to the tumor rather than the therapy. The diminished cochlear SI does not correlate with subsequent loss of hearing. Show less
Background Evaluating patients' experiences is essential when incorporating the patients' perspective in improving healthcare. Experiences are mainly collected using closed-ended questions,... Show moreBackground Evaluating patients' experiences is essential when incorporating the patients' perspective in improving healthcare. Experiences are mainly collected using closed-ended questions, although the value of open-ended questions is widely recognized. Natural language processing (NLP) can automate the analysis of open-ended questions for an efficient approach to patient-centeredness. Methods We developed the Artificial Intelligence Patient-Reported Experience Measures (AI-PREM) tool, consisting of a new, open-ended questionnaire, an NLP pipeline to analyze the answers using sentiment analysis and topic modeling, and a visualization to guide physicians through the results. The questionnaire and NLP pipeline were iteratively developed and validated in a clinical context. Results The final AI-PREM consisted of five open-ended questions about the provided information, personal approach, collaboration between healthcare professionals, organization of care, and other experiences. The AI-PREM was sent to 867 vestibular schwannoma patients, 534 of which responded. The sentiment analysis model attained an F1 score of 0.97 for positive texts and 0.63 for negative texts. There was a 90% overlap between automatically and manually extracted topics. The visualization was hierarchically structured into three stages: the sentiment per question, the topics per sentiment and question, and the original patient responses per topic. Conclusions The AI-PREM tool is a comprehensive method that combines a validated, open-ended questionnaire with a well-performing NLP pipeline and visualization. Thematically organizing and quantifying patient feedback reduces the time invested by healthcare professionals to evaluate and prioritize patient experiences without being confined to the limited answer options of closed-ended questions. Show less
Neve, O.M.; Chen, Y.J.; Tao, Q.; Romeijn, S.R.; Boer, N.P. de; Grootjans, W.; ... ; Staring, M. 2022
Purpose: To develop automated vestibular schwannoma measurements on contrast-enhanced T1- and T2-weighted MRI scans.Materials and Methods: MRI data from 214 patients in 37 different centers were... Show morePurpose: To develop automated vestibular schwannoma measurements on contrast-enhanced T1- and T2-weighted MRI scans.Materials and Methods: MRI data from 214 patients in 37 different centers were retrospectively analyzed between 2020 and 2021. Patients with hearing loss (134 positive for vestibular schwannoma [mean age 6 SD, 54 years 6 12; 64 men] and 80 negative for vestibular schwannoma) were randomly assigned to a training and validation set and to an independent test set. A convolutional neural network (CNN) was trained using fivefold cross-validation for two models (T1 and T2). Quantitative analysis, including Dice index, Hausdorff distance, surface-to-surface distance (S2S), and relative volume error, was used to compare the computer and the human delineations. An observer study was performed in which two experienced physicians evaluated both delineations.Results: The T1-weighted model showed state-of-the-art performance, with a mean S2S distance of less than 0.6 mm for the whole tumor and the intrameatal and extrameatal tumor parts. The whole tumor Dice index and Hausdorff distance were 0.92 and 2.1 mm in the independent test set, respectively. T2-weighted images had a mean S2S distance less than 0.6 mm for the whole tumor and the intrameatal and extrameatal tumor parts. The whole tumor Dice index and Hausdorff distance were 0.87 and 1.5 mm in the independent test set. The observer study indicated that the tool was similar to human delineations in 85%-92% of cases.Conclusion: The CNN model detected and delineated vestibular schwannomas accurately on contrast-enhanced T1- and T2-weighted MRI scans and distinguished the clinically relevant difference between intrameatal and extrameatal tumor parts. (C) RSNA, 2022 Show less
Objective To highlight the advantages and disadvantages of the combined translabyrinthine (TL) and classic retrosigmoid (RS) approaches. Design Retrospective chart review. Setting National tertiary... Show moreObjective To highlight the advantages and disadvantages of the combined translabyrinthine (TL) and classic retrosigmoid (RS) approaches. Design Retrospective chart review. Setting National tertiary referral center for skull base pathology. Participants Twenty-two patients with very large cerebellopontine angle tumors were resected using the combined TL-RS approach. Main Outcome Measures Preoperative patient characteristics including age, sex, and hearing loss. Tumor characteristics, pathology, and size. Intraoperative outcome: tumor removal. Postoperative outcomes included facial nerve function, residual tumor growth, and neurological deficits. Results Thirteen patients had schwannoma, eight had meningioma, and one had both. The mean age was 47 years, mean tumor size was 39 x 32 x 35 mm (anterior-posterior, medial-lateral, craniocaudal), and mean follow-up period was 80 months. Tumor control was achieved in 13 patients (59%), and 9 (41%) had residual tumor growth that required additional treatment. Seventeen patients (77%) had postoperative House-Brackmann (H-B) facial nerve function grades I to II, one had H-B grade III, one H-B grade V, and three H-B grade VI. Conclusion Combining TL and RS approaches may be helpful in safely removing large meningiomas and schwannomas in selected cases. This valuable technique should be considered when sufficient exposure cannot be achieved with the TL or RS approach alone. Show less
Numerous studies have shown the recovery of auditory function in mouse models of genetic hearing loss following AAV gene therapy, yet translation to the clinic has not yet been demonstrated. One... Show moreNumerous studies have shown the recovery of auditory function in mouse models of genetic hearing loss following AAV gene therapy, yet translation to the clinic has not yet been demonstrated. One limitation has been the lack of human inner ear cell lines or tissues for validating viral gene therapies. Cultured human inner ear tissue could help confirm viral tropism and efficacy for driving exogenous gene expression in targeted cell types, establish promoter efficacy and perhaps selectivity for targeted cells, confirm the expression of therapeutic constructs and the subcellular localization of therapeutic proteins, and address the potential cellular toxicity of vectors or exogenous constructs. To begin to address these questions, we developed an explant culture method using native human inner ear tissue excised at either fetal or adult stages. Inner ear sensory epithelia were cultured for four days and exposed to vectors encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP). We focused on the synthetic AAV9-PHP.B capsid, which has been demonstrated to be efficient for driving eGFP expression in the sensory hair cells of mouse and non-human primate inner ears. We report that AAV9-PHP.B also drives eGFP expression in fetal cochlear hair cells and in fetal and adult vestibular hair cells in explants of human inner ear sensory epithelia, which suggests that both the experimental paradigm and the viral capsid may be valuable for translation to clinical application. Show less
Objective: Vestibular schwannoma management aims to maintain optimal quality of life (QoL) while preventing severe sequelae of the tumor or its treatment. This study assessed long-term QoL of... Show moreObjective: Vestibular schwannoma management aims to maintain optimal quality of life (QoL) while preventing severe sequelae of the tumor or its treatment. This study assessed long-term QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma in relation to treatment modality and decisional regret. Study Design: A longitudinal study, in which clinical and QoL data were used that were cross-sectionally acquired in 2014 and again in 2020 from the same patient group. Setting: A tertiary expert center for vestibular schwannoma care in the Netherlands. Methods: QoL was measured by the Penn Acoustic Quality of Life (PANQOL) scale. Changes in time were assed using a linear mixed model. In addition, the Decision Regret Scale was analyzed. Results: Of 867 patients, 536 responded (62%), with a median follow-up of 11 years. All PANQOL subdomain scores remained stable over time and did not exceed minimal clinically important difference (MCID) levels. Time since treatment did not affect QoL. Patients had comparable average QoL scores and proportions of patients with changing QoL scores (ie, exceeding the MCID) over time, irrespective of the received initial treatment. Female patients and those who required salvage therapy (either by radiotherapy or surgery) reported a lower QoL. The latter patient group reported the highest decisional regret. Conclusion: On average, the long-term QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma is comparable for patients under active surveillance and those who have received active treatment, and it remains stable over time. This suggests that, on average, preservation of QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma is feasible when adequately managed. Show less
Neve, O.M.; Jansen, J.C.; Koot, R.W.; Ridder, M. de; Benthem, P.P.G. van; Stiggelbout, A.M.; Hensen, E.F. 2022
Objective Vestibular schwannoma management aims to maintain optimal quality of life (QoL) while preventing severe sequelae of the tumor or its treatment. This study assessed long-term QoL of... Show moreObjective Vestibular schwannoma management aims to maintain optimal quality of life (QoL) while preventing severe sequelae of the tumor or its treatment. This study assessed long-term QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma in relation to treatment modality and decisional regret. Study Design A longitudinal study, in which clinical and QoL data were used that were cross-sectionally acquired in 2014 and again in 2020 from the same patient group. Setting A tertiary expert center for vestibular schwannoma care in the Netherlands. Methods QoL was measured by the Penn Acoustic Quality of Life (PANQOL) scale. Changes in time were assed using a linear mixed model. In addition, the Decision Regret Scale was analyzed. Results Of 867 patients, 536 responded (62%), with a median follow-up of 11 years. All PANQOL subdomain scores remained stable over time and did not exceed minimal clinically important difference (MCID) levels. Time since treatment did not affect QoL. Patients had comparable average QoL scores and proportions of patients with changing QoL scores (ie, exceeding the MCID) over time, irrespective of the received initial treatment. Female patients and those who required salvage therapy (either by radiotherapy or surgery) reported a lower QoL. The latter patient group reported the highest decisional regret. Conclusion On average, the long-term QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma is comparable for patients under active surveillance and those who have received active treatment, and it remains stable over time. This suggests that, on average, preservation of QoL of patients with vestibular schwannoma is feasible when adequately managed. Show less
Purpose The aim of this study is to compute and validate a statistical predictive model for the risk of recurrence, defined as regrowth of tumor necessitating salvage treatment, after... Show morePurpose The aim of this study is to compute and validate a statistical predictive model for the risk of recurrence, defined as regrowth of tumor necessitating salvage treatment, after translabyrinthine removal of vestibular schwannomas to individualize postoperative surveillance. Methods The multivariable predictive model for risk of recurrence was based on retrospectively collected patient data between 1995 and 2017 at a tertiary referral center. To assess for internal validity of the prediction model tenfold cross-validation was performed. A 'low' calculated risk of recurrence in this study was set at < 1%, based on clinical criteria and expert opinion. Results A total of 596 patients with 33 recurrences (5.5%) were included for analysis. The final prediction model consisted of the predictors 'age at time of surgery', 'preoperative tumor growth' and 'first postoperative MRI outcome'. The area under the receiver operating curve of the prediction model was 89%, with a C-index of 0.686 (95% CI 0.614-0.796) after cross-validation. The predicted probability for risk of recurrence was low (< 1%) in 373 patients (63%). The earliest recurrence in these low-risk patients was detected at 46 months after surgery. Conclusion This study presents a well-performing prediction model for the risk of recurrence after translabyrinthine surgery for vestibular schwannoma. The prediction model can be used to tailor the postoperative surveillance to the estimated risk of recurrence of individual patients. It seems that especially in patients with an estimated low risk of recurrence, the interval between the first and second postoperative MRI can be safely prolonged. Show less
Objective: To assess the efficacy and toxicity of proton radiotherapy in vestibular schwannoma. Study Design: Retrospective chart review and volumetric MRI-analyses. Setting: Tertiary referral... Show moreObjective: To assess the efficacy and toxicity of proton radiotherapy in vestibular schwannoma. Study Design: Retrospective chart review and volumetric MRI-analyses. Setting: Tertiary referral center. Patients: Vestibular schwannoma patients treated with protons between 2003 and 2018. Intervention: Proton radiotherapy. Main Outcome Measures: Tumor control was defined as not requiring salvage treatment. Progressive hearing loss was defined as a decrease in maximum speech discrimination score below the 95% critical difference in reference to the pretreatment score. Hearing assessment includes contralateral hearing and duration of follow-up. Dizziness and/or unsteadiness and facial and trigeminal nerve function were scored. Patients who had surgery prior to proton radiotherapy were separately assessed. Results: Of 221 included patients, 136 received single fraction and 85 fractionated proton radiotherapy. Actuarial 5-year local control rate was 96% (95% CI 90-98%). The median radiological follow-up was 4.5 years. Progressive postirradiation speech discrimination score loss occurred in 42% of patients with audiometric follow-up within a year. Facial paresis was found in 5% (usually mild), severe dizziness in 5%, and trigeminal neuralgia in 5% of patients receiving protons as primary treatment. Conclusions: Proton radiotherapy achieves high tumor control with modest side effects aside from hearing loss in vestibular schwannoma patients. Limited and heterogeneous outcome reporting hamper comparisons to the literature. Potential sequelae of radiation therapy impacting vestibular function, cognitive function, and quality of life warrant further evaluation. Subgroups that benefit most from proton radiotherapy should be identified to optimize allocation and counterbalance its costs. Show less
Bayley, J.P.; Bausch, B.; Jansen, J.C.; Hensen, E.F.; Tuin, K. van der; Corssmit, E.P.M.; ... ; Neumann, H.P.H. 2021
Background Traditional genotype-phenotype correlations for the succinate dehydrogenase-complex II (SDH) genes link SDHB variants to thoracic-abdominal pheochromocytoma-paraganglioma (PPGL) and SDHD... Show moreBackground Traditional genotype-phenotype correlations for the succinate dehydrogenase-complex II (SDH) genes link SDHB variants to thoracic-abdominal pheochromocytoma-paraganglioma (PPGL) and SDHD variants to head and neck paraganglioma (HNPGL). However, in a recent study we found strong and specific genotype-phenotype associations for SDHD variants. In the present study we zoom in on the genotype-phenotype associations of SDHB gene variants, considering the impact of individual gene variants on disease risk and risk of malignancy. Methods We analysed two large independent data sets, including a total of 448 patients with PPGL and HNPGL, and studied the association of missense or truncating SDHB variants with tumour incidence, age of onset and malignancy risk using binomial testing and Kaplan-Meier analysis. Results Compared with missense variants, truncating SDHB variants were significantly and consistently more common in patients with PPGL, by a 20 percentage point margin. Malignancy was also significantly more common in truncating versus missense variant carriers. No overall differences in age of PPGL onset were noted between carriers of the two variant types, although some individual variants may differ in certain cases. Missense variants were marginally over-represented among patients with HNPGL, but the difference was not statistically significant. Conclusion SDHB truncating variants convey an elevated risk for development of both PPGL and malignancy compared with missense variants. These results further support earlier robust associations between truncating variants and PPGL, and also suggest that the two variant types differ in their impact on complex II function, with PPGL/HNPGL tissues displaying differing sensitivities to changes in complex II function. Show less
Objective: To evaluate the long-term ipsi- and contralateral hearing of patients with a unilateral enlarged vestibular aqueduct (EVA). Study design: Multicenter retrospective cohort study. Setting:... Show moreObjective: To evaluate the long-term ipsi- and contralateral hearing of patients with a unilateral enlarged vestibular aqueduct (EVA). Study design: Multicenter retrospective cohort study. Setting: Three tertiary otology and audiology referral centers. Patients and diagnostic interventions: A total of 34 children with a unilateral enlarged vestibular aqueduct as identified on CT and/or MR imaging were evaluated with pure tone and speech perception audiometry. Mean outcome measures: Radiologic measurements of the vestibular aqueduct, ipsi- and contralateral hearing loss, ipsi- and contralateral hearing loss progression over time and DNA test results. Results: All patients in this cohort with unilateral EVA presented with hearing loss. Hearing loss was progressive in 38% of the ipsilateral ears. In 29% of the children, hearing loss was also found in the contralateral ear without EVA. In 90%, the contralateral hearing was stable, with a mean follow up of 4.2 years. We found a significant correlation between the severity of the hearing loss and the size of the EVA. A genetic diagnosis associated with EVA and/or SNHL was found in only 7%. Conclusion: About a third of the children with unilateral EVA are at risk of developing hearing loss in the contralateral ear. This indicates that at least in some patients with a unilateral EVA, a bilateral pathogenic process underlies the hearing loss, in contrary to what the imaging results suggest. These findings are important for counseling of EVA patients and their parents and have implications for follow up. Show less
Neve, O.M.; Benthem, P.P.G. van; Stiggelbout, A.M.; Hensen, E.F. 2021
Background Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs) are subjective outcomes of disease and/or treatment in clinical research. For effective evaluations of PROs, high response rates are crucial. This study... Show moreBackground Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs) are subjective outcomes of disease and/or treatment in clinical research. For effective evaluations of PROs, high response rates are crucial. This study assessed the impact of the delivery method on the patients' response rate. Methods A cohort of patients with a unilateral vestibular schwannoma (a condition with substantial impact on quality of life, requiring prolonged follow-up) was assigned to three delivery methods: email, regular mail, and hybrid. Patients were matched for age and time since the last visit to the outpatient clinic. The primary outcome was the response rate, determinants other than delivery mode were age, education and time since the last consultation. In addition, the effect of a second reminder by telephone was evaluated. Results In total 602 patients participated in this study. The response rates for delivery by email, hybrid, and mail were 45, 58 and 60%, respectively. The response rates increased after a reminder by telephone to 62, 67 and 64%, respectively. A lower response rate was associated with lower level of education and longer time interval since last outpatient clinic visit. Conclusion The response rate for PRO varies by delivery method. PRO surveys by regular mail yield the highest response rate, followed by hybrid and email delivery methods. Hybrid delivery combines good response rates with the ease of digitally returned questionnaires. Show less