Minimally Invasive Management of Neonatal Piriform Fossa Sinus Tract: A Scoping Review

Author:

Tobia Amjad1ORCID,Cherukupalli Abhiram1,Liu Alice Q.1,Chadha Neil K.1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, British Columbia Children's Hospital University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada

Abstract

ObjectiveIn rare situations, neonates may present with respiratory distress and neck swelling from a piriform fossa sinus tract (PFST) lesion. Open surgical excision of PFST may be associated with higher complication rates, especially in neonates. Endoscopic treatment has been shown to have high success rates in older children, but neonatal outcomes appear to be less promising. The objective of this study was to review the existing literature on endoscopic treatment of PFST in neonates.Review MethodsPRISMA‐ScR guidelines for scoping reviews were employed. Medline and Embase databases were searched in accordance with a detailed search strategy. Nine studies met criteria for inclusion.ResultsA total of 21 neonates with PFST treated endoscopically were reviewed. Mean age at onset of symptoms was 11.6 days. Neck swelling was the most common presenting symptom (20/21, 95%), followed by respiratory distress (6/9, 66.6%). Success rate after initial endoscopic treatment was 57% (12/21); among those, seven patients required additional concurrent treatments such as neck/pharyngeal swelling decompression or sclerotherapy. Nine patients underwent a second intervention (43%) and three patients (14%) required three interventions. Notably, 90% of patients (19/21) achieved success with only minimally invasive approaches. Two patients underwent open salvage surgical excision after recurrence following initial endoscopic treatment.ConclusionNeonates with PFST and cystic neck masses are prone to recurrence after initial minimally invasive endoscopic treatment; however, high success rate may be achieved after repeat interventions. Adjunctive measures to optimize outcome may include swelling decompression w/wo sclerotherapy to cause fibrosis and postoperative nasogastric tube feeding.Level of EvidenceNA Laryngoscope, 2023

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology

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