# Characteristics and prognostic analysis of cystic vestibular schwannomas: prolonged surgical duration with limited impact on neurological function

**Authors:** Xuanpeng Li, Hongying Cai, Huijun Gong, Zi’ang Wang, Jibo Lv

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1589941 · 2025-07-30

## TL;DR

This study compares cystic and solid vestibular schwannomas, finding that cystic tumors take longer to operate on but do not significantly affect neurological outcomes.

## Contribution

The study identifies tumor volume and patient age as key predictors of postoperative outcomes in vestibular schwannoma surgery.

## Key findings

- CVS cases had larger tumor volumes and longer surgical durations compared to SVS.
- Postoperative facial nerve and hearing preservation rates were lower in the CVS group.
- Tumor volume and patient age were identified as independent predictors of functional outcomes.

## Abstract

This study aims to evaluate the differences between cystic vestibular schwannomas (CVS) and solid vestibular schwannomas (SVS) with respect to imaging characteristics, surgical duration, gross total resection (GTR) rates, and postoperative neurological functional outcomes. The goal is to inform individualized surgical planning and perioperative management.

A retrospective analysis was conducted on 273 patients who underwent surgery for vestibular schwannomas. Patient data were divided into CVS and SVS groups. Comparisons were made regarding tumor volume, surgical duration, GTR rates, and postoperative preservation of facial nerve function and hearing. Multivariate analysis was used to identify independent predictors for postoperative functional outcomes.

The findings revealed that CVS cases had larger tumor volumes and longer surgical durations (96.6 minutes vs. 87.5 minutes) compared to SVS. Additionally, the rates of postoperative facial nerve function preservation and hearing preservation were lower in the CVS group, while no significant difference was found in GTR rates between the two groups. Multivariate analysis identified tumor volume and patient age as independent predictors of postoperative functional outcomes, whereas cystic changes had a limited impact on prognosis.

These results underscore the importance of thorough preoperative assessment of tumor volume and cystic characteristics in vestibular schwannomas. Evaluating these factors can optimize individualized surgical strategies and perioperative management, with the aim of improving postoperative functional outcomes for patients.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** NF2 (NF2, moesin-ezrin-radixin like (MERLIN) tumor suppressor) [NCBI Gene 4771] {aka ACN, BANF, SCH, SWNV, merlin-1}
- **Diseases:** facial nerve paralysis (MESH:D005158), neurological dysfunction (MESH:D009461), HB (MESH:D018877), vertigo (MESH:D014717), tinnitus (MESH:D014012), Goss tumor (MESH:D009369), DOS (MESH:D012816), Cystic degeneration (MESH:D018297), genetic syndromes (MESH:D030342), CVS (MESH:D009464), hearing preservation (MESH:C537758), hearing loss (MESH:D034381), cyst (MESH:D003560)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12343266/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12343266