Abstract
Objective: Patients with symptomatic Rathke's cleft cysts (RCCs) managed by surgical treatment often experience recurrence. The authors attempted to clarify the outcome of surgically treated RCCs over a long-term follow-up period. Methods: Ninety-one consecutive RCC patients with a follow-up period of more than 12 months (mean 80.2 months, range 12-297 months) were retrospectively studied. The authors examined the clinical features and postoperative course of patients who experienced a reaccumulation of cyst contents visible on MRI after the initial surgery, and they investigated data from the patients who underwent reoperation for symptomatic recurrent RCCs. Results: Reaccumulation of cyst contents occurred in 36 patients (39.6%). In 34 of these patients, a reaccumulation occurred in the first 5 years after surgery. The initial cysts in these patients were most often large, with squamous metaplasia in the cyst walls. Thirteen patients (14.3%) with recurrent symptoms underwent a reoperation, and 10 of the 13 patients had a reaccumulation of RCCs within the 1st year after surgery. The reoperations were performed in the 1st year (61.5%) or several years later (23.1%). Patients were likely to initially have had a visual disturbance and the cyst walls likely included squamous metaplasia. However, no association was observed between the incidence of reaccumulation/ reoperation of RCCs and the surgical procedure for RCCs. Conclusions: The reaccumulation rate of RCC is high in the long-term period, and it is associated with the histological findings but not with the surgical procedure. Long-term monitoring, for a period of at least 5 years, should therefore be conducted to identify and assess any RCC reaccumulation.
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Kinoshita, Y., Tominaga, A., Usui, S., Arita, K., Sakoguchi, T., Sugiyama, K., & Kurisu, K. (2016). The long-term recurrence of Rathke’s cleft cysts as predicted by histology but not by surgical procedure. Journal of Neurosurgery, 125(4), 1002–1007. https://doi.org/10.3171/2015.8.JNS151282
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