One-Year symptom outcomes after sialolithiasis treatment with sialendoscopy-assisted salivary duct surgery: Durability of Treatment for Sialolithiasis

2019 
OBJECTIVES: For chronic obstructive sialadenitis, there is a paucity of long-term prospective evidence of disease-specific symptom outcomes after sialendoscopy-assisted salivary duct surgery (SASDS). We prospectively assessed patients with sialolithiasis before and at 3 months and 1 year after SASDS using the Chronic Obstructive Sialadenitis Symptoms (COSS) questionnaire. METHODS: A prospective cohort study of adult patients with sialolithiasis who underwent SASDS and completed the COSS questionnaire over a 1-year follow-up period. The COSS questionnaire consists of 20 disease-specific symptom questions. COSS score outcomes were classified by complete, partial, and nonresolution, as well as by clinically significant improvement. RESULTS: Ninety-six patients underwent SASDS in 110 glands, of which 69 glands (63%) had findings of sialolithiasis. The following median COSS scores were reported for sialolithiasis glands: preoperative, 27.5 (interquartile range [IQR]: 12.5-44); 3 months, 1 (IQR: 0-5); and 1 year, 1 (IQR: 0-5.5). Patients with sialolithiasis reported statistically significant improvements in COSS scores from preoperative to 3 months post-SASDS (P > 0.05). A vast majority of patients maintained this improvement from 3 months to 1 year, indicating durability. Complete resolution of symptoms was attained in 95% and 85% of glands at 3 months and 1 year, respectively. Open/hybrid compared to endoscopic-only sialolithiasis extraction achieved similar 3-month and 1-year COSS outcomes. Potential risk factors for symptom persistence after SASDS included nonreachable parenchymal sialoliths and concurrent inflammatory disease and/or stenosis. CONCLUSION: SASDS for sialolithiasis extraction is associated with durable, long-term benefit regardless of endoscopic or open technique or sialolith location, suggesting that subsequent ductal stenosis from iatrogenic or sialolithiasis-related inflammation fibrosis is unlikely. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4 Laryngoscope, 129:396-402, 2019.
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