Object: To determine the safety and usefulness of performing surgery via the occipital transtentorial approach to treat anterosuperior cerebellar tumors, evaluation of 14 patients was performed over a 5-year period.
Methods: The study was performed in 14 patients, aged 6 months to 71 years, who harbored anterosuperior cerebellar tumors of the posterior fossa including four hemangioblastomas, three cerebellar astrocytomas, three medulloblastomas, two metastatic tumors, one recurrent astrocytoma, and one rhabdoid cell tumor. All patients underwent surgical treatment by the same surgical team and via the same surgical approach. Endoscopy combined with neuronavigation was used for large, deep-seated tumors extending to the fourth ventricle. Of the 14 patients, total or gross-total removal was achieved in 12 patients and subtotal removal in two patients. There was no incidence of mortality or morbidity in the 14 patients, and all functional outcomes were good to excellent postoperatively. Postoperative magnetic resonance imaging revealed that none of the patients had suffered brain damage or infarction around the cerebellum, brainstem, or occipital lobe.
Conclusions: Although this study was the first in which a specific examination of the efficacy of the occipital transtentorial approach in patients with anterosuperior cerebellar tumors was undertaken, our findings suggest that this surgical approach is very useful, safe, and accurate for removing the primary tumor and evaluating the surrounding anatomy, as well as for determining operative strategy.