Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital

Objective: To study sinonasal papilloma patients in terms of clinical characteristics, treatment, outcome, and complications. Material and Method: A retrospective descriptive study was done. Sinonasal papilloma data were gathered between 1999 and 2009. There were 63 available patients from the 82 ca...

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Main Authors: Supranee Fooanant, Thienchai Pattarasakulchai, Rak Tananuvat, Pichit Sittitrai, Saisawat Chaiyasate, Kannika Roongrotwattanasiri, Chonticha Srivanitchapoom
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52889
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-528892018-09-04T09:34:11Z Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital Supranee Fooanant Thienchai Pattarasakulchai Rak Tananuvat Pichit Sittitrai Saisawat Chaiyasate Kannika Roongrotwattanasiri Chonticha Srivanitchapoom Medicine Objective: To study sinonasal papilloma patients in terms of clinical characteristics, treatment, outcome, and complications. Material and Method: A retrospective descriptive study was done. Sinonasal papilloma data were gathered between 1999 and 2009. There were 63 available patients from the 82 cases. Results: There were nine cases of nasal papilloma (14.3%) and 54 of inverted papilloma (85.7%). The mean age of the inverted papilloma group was higher than the nasal papilloma group (54±12.97 years vs. 42.4±24.8 years). The most common symptom was unilateral nasal obstruction. There were three cases of synchronous malignancy in the inverted papilloma and two metachronous (9.3%). Thirty-nine patients (72%) could be followed-up for more than three months. Recurrence was more common in the inverted papilloma group than nasal papilloma (37% vs. 11.1%). The 50% recurrent time of the endoscopic group was 51 weeks and the external group was 14 weeks. The recurrence of the external approach group was 1.59 times the endoscopic group. Ten surgical complications were found in eight inverted papilloma patients (16%) and included three in the endoscopic and five in the external group. Most of them were minor. They were hypoesthesia and epiphora. Conclusion: Sinonasal inverted papilloma was common, able to recur, and associated with malignancy. Though this was a limited retrospective study, it showed lower recurrence on the endoscopic approach. The life-long follow-up is needed in all cases. 2018-09-04T09:34:11Z 2018-09-04T09:34:11Z 2013-03-01 Journal 01252208 2-s2.0-84874779046 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84874779046&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52889
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Supranee Fooanant
Thienchai Pattarasakulchai
Rak Tananuvat
Pichit Sittitrai
Saisawat Chaiyasate
Kannika Roongrotwattanasiri
Chonticha Srivanitchapoom
Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
description Objective: To study sinonasal papilloma patients in terms of clinical characteristics, treatment, outcome, and complications. Material and Method: A retrospective descriptive study was done. Sinonasal papilloma data were gathered between 1999 and 2009. There were 63 available patients from the 82 cases. Results: There were nine cases of nasal papilloma (14.3%) and 54 of inverted papilloma (85.7%). The mean age of the inverted papilloma group was higher than the nasal papilloma group (54±12.97 years vs. 42.4±24.8 years). The most common symptom was unilateral nasal obstruction. There were three cases of synchronous malignancy in the inverted papilloma and two metachronous (9.3%). Thirty-nine patients (72%) could be followed-up for more than three months. Recurrence was more common in the inverted papilloma group than nasal papilloma (37% vs. 11.1%). The 50% recurrent time of the endoscopic group was 51 weeks and the external group was 14 weeks. The recurrence of the external approach group was 1.59 times the endoscopic group. Ten surgical complications were found in eight inverted papilloma patients (16%) and included three in the endoscopic and five in the external group. Most of them were minor. They were hypoesthesia and epiphora. Conclusion: Sinonasal inverted papilloma was common, able to recur, and associated with malignancy. Though this was a limited retrospective study, it showed lower recurrence on the endoscopic approach. The life-long follow-up is needed in all cases.
format Journal
author Supranee Fooanant
Thienchai Pattarasakulchai
Rak Tananuvat
Pichit Sittitrai
Saisawat Chaiyasate
Kannika Roongrotwattanasiri
Chonticha Srivanitchapoom
author_facet Supranee Fooanant
Thienchai Pattarasakulchai
Rak Tananuvat
Pichit Sittitrai
Saisawat Chaiyasate
Kannika Roongrotwattanasiri
Chonticha Srivanitchapoom
author_sort Supranee Fooanant
title Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
title_short Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
title_full Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
title_fullStr Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
title_full_unstemmed Sinonasal papilloma in Chiang Mai university hospital
title_sort sinonasal papilloma in chiang mai university hospital
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84874779046&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/52889
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