Objective: The objective of the study is to evaluate the outcomes of surgical management options for cholesteatoma using a national database.
Study design: Database analysis of the Pediatric Health Information System database to identify children undergoing surgical intervention for cholesteatoma from October 2015 to December 2022.
Methods: Patients were categorized by initial surgical modality: tympanoplasty (TM), tympanoplasty with canal wall-up tympanomastoidectomy (TM-CWU), and tympanoplasty with canal wall-down tympanomastoidectomy (TM-CWD). Group comparisons were done on number of surgical revisions and number of patients identified with recommendations for hearing aids.
Results: A total of 6304 patients were identified in the database who underwent surgery for cholesteatoma. Of these children, 3405 underwent TM (54.0%), 3116 underwent TM-CWU (49.4%), and 825 underwent TM-CWD (8.2%). The estimated difference in mean number of procedures was significantly higher in the TM-CWU group compared to TM-CWD (-0.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.406,-0.279, P < .0001) and the TM group (9.352, 95% CI 0.315, 0.390, P < .0001). The rate of significant hearing loss necessitating hearing aids was significantly lower in the TM group, but there was no difference between the TM-CWU and TM-CWD groups (1.2%, P < .03, 1.9% vs 2.7%, P = .13). There was no difference in the number of speech delays/therapy diagnoses between TM and TM-CWU or TM-CWU and TM-CWD (3.5%vs 4.4% P = .07, 4.4% vs 5.2%., P = .38).
Conclusion: TM and TM-CWD had lower total surgical procedures than the TM-CWU group, and the TM group had a lesser rate of recommendation for hearing aids. The difference between number of procedures is likely due to the complexity of the disease; for instance, TM was likely chosen for small, less severe disease cases, whereas TM-CWD was chosen as more definitive treatment in aggressive cases. TM-CWD is associated with a lower rate of recidivism and recurrence, which also likely contributed to the lower number of procedures.
Keywords: endoscopic ear surgery; pediatric cholesteatoma; recidivism.
© 2024 The Author(s). Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Foundation.