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Intracranial extension of inverted papilloma: An unusual and potentially fatal complication

โœ Scribed by Emre Vural; James Y. Suen; Ehab Hanna


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
68 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1043-3074

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โœฆ Synopsis


Background. The purpose of this article is to define the outcome of intracranial extension of inverted papilloma and outline a rationale for management of this rare clinical presentation.

Methods. A review of patients with intracranial extension of inverted papilloma reported in the literature (18 patients), or treated in our institution (3 patients ) was performed. The data of these 21 patients were consolidated with regard to clinical presentation, treatment, and outcome. Nine patients, including 1 of our cases, had coexisting squamous cell carcinoma and therefore were excluded from the analysis. Twelve patients with "pure" inverted papilloma formed the basis of this study.

Results. The majority of patients (83%) with intracranial inverted papilloma had recurrent disease. Patients with extradural disease had a survival rate of 86% with an average follow-up of 4.4 years. Eighty-six percent of these survivors were treated with craniofacial resection. In contrast, 75% of patients with intradural inverted papilloma were dead of disease with an average followup of 9.3 months regardless of the treatment modality.

Conclusions. Intracranial extension of inverted papilloma is mostly associated with recurrent disease. Intracranial extradural inverted papilloma can be effectively controlled with craniofacial resection. Intracranial intradural involvement of inverted papil-loma has a poor prognosis regardless of treatment. Aggressive treatment of intranasal inverted papilloma may be the most important factor in preventing intracranial presentation.


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