# Perioperative Outcomes in Antegrade, Retrograde, and Extracapsular Approaches to Parotidectomy in Benign and Malignant Neoplasms

**Authors:** Andrew D. P. Prince, Christian Schaaff, David Forner, Kimberly Oslin, Josh Smith, Michael M. Alevato, Emma Hershey, Lisa Chionis, Molly E. H. Neal, Mark E. P. Prince, Steven B. Chinn

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ohn.70112 · 2026-01-08

## TL;DR

This study compares surgical approaches for parotidectomy and finds that extracapsular and retrograde techniques may reduce facial nerve weakness in benign cases.

## Contribution

The study introduces evidence that extracapsular dissection reduces transient facial weakness in benign parotidectomy.

## Key findings

- Extracapsular dissection significantly reduced transient facial weakness compared to antegrade dissection in benign tumors.
- Antegrade dissection had longer operative times in both benign and malignant tumors.
- Outcomes for malignant tumors were similar across all surgical approaches.

## Abstract

To compare facial nerve function and perioperative outcomes among antegrade, retrograde, and extracapsular parotidectomy approaches in benign and malignant tumors.

Retrospective review.

Tertiary academic center.

Adults undergoing parotidectomy with facial nerve preservation between 2018 and 2023 were included. Demographic, surgical, and outcome variables were analyzed using bivariate and multivariable regression.

A total of 740 tumors were analyzed (353 benign, 387 malignant). Antegrade dissection was performed in 288 cases (194 malignant), retrograde in 334 (167 malignant), and extracapsular in 118 (26 malignant). Transient and permanent facial weakness occurred in 20% and 5% of cases. After adjustment, extracapsular dissection (odds ratio [OR] = 0.2, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.1‐0.7, P = .0058) significantly reduced transient weakness compared with antegrade dissection. Retrograde dissection (OR = 0.5, 95% CI 0.3‐1.1, P = .11) demonstrated a trend toward lower rates of transient weakness relative to antegrade dissection. In malignant tumors, outcomes were similar across approaches. Extracapsular dissection was rarely used in malignant disease and reserved for selected cases. Antegrade dissection had longer operative times in benign and malignant tumors (P < .001). Perioperative complication rates, unplanned visits, recurrence, re‐operations, ED visits, and readmissions were low and not significantly different across techniques.

In benign parotidectomy, extracapsular dissection significantly reduced transient facial weakness, while retrograde dissection demonstrated a trend toward reduced transient weakness compared with antegrade. In malignant disease, outcomes were similar across approaches. Selective application of extracapsular and retrograde techniques may optimize facial nerve outcomes and operative efficiency.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Benign and Malignant Neoplasms (MESH:D009369), facial weakness (MESH:D018908)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12860175/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12860175