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Original Article |

Operative Management of Choanal Atresia:  A 15-Year Experience

J. Robert Newman, MD; Paula Harmon, MD; W. Peyton Shirley, MD; J. Scott Hill, MD; Audie L. Woolley, MD; Brian J. Wiatrak, MD
JAMA Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2013;139(1):71-75. doi:10.1001/jamaoto.2013.1111.
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Objective  To analyze factors affecting 15-year surgical outcomes of choanal atresia repair.

Design  Case series.

Setting  Tertiary care pediatric hospital.

Patients  Between April 17, 1996, and March 23, 2010, a total of 42 patients aged 3 days to 15 years underwent endoscopic or transpalatal choanal atresia repair by our pediatric otolaryngology faculty.

Main Outcome Measures  Reoperation and restenosis rates, with consideration of effects of mitomycin C therapy, stenting, and postoperative dilation.

Results  Three of 42 patients were excluded because of inadequate follow-up data; the follow-up time for the remaining 39 patients averaged 6.3 years (range, 1-14.9 years). Excluding 6 patients whose initial repair was performed by other physicians, 31 of 33 patients in whom we performed initial repair had a total of 43 endoscopic surgical procedures (19 patients had unilateral procedures, and 12 patients had bilateral procedures), and the other 2 underwent bilateral transpalatal repair. Of the total 43 sides we operated on endoscopically, 9 sides (21%) required revision surgery, including excision of scar tissue or additional drilling of persistent bony stenosis. No significant difference was observed in the rate of restenosis among cases treated endoscopically with mitomycin C (22 of 43 operative sides, P = .13), with stenting (36 of 43 operative sides, P = .99), or with subsequent dilation (P = .45). When we used stents, they were usually (in 28 of 36 patients) left in place for 15 days or longer.

Conclusion  Our revision rate after initial endoscopic repair of choanal atresia was low and was unaffected by adjuvant mitomycin C therapy or stenting.

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Grahic Jump Location

Figure. Percentage of 43 cases of congenital choanal atresia (in 31 patients) that required revision surgery after initial endoscopic repair. Revision rates were similar whether mitomycin C was used (22 of 43 operative sides, P = .13) and whether intranasal stents were used (36 of 43 operative sides, P > .99). Seven of 22 patients who were treated with mitomycin C required revision surgery. Eight of 26 patients who underwent stenting required revision surgery.

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