Serena,
Sorry to just be replying to your question now. If you have great hearing now, in my opinion, it would be worth going for retrosigmoid or middle fossa to try for hearing preservation. Remember though, no one can guarantee an outcome, including hearing preservation. These two approaches ATTEMPT hearing preservation. The middle fossa approach does have a higher risk of temporary facial paralysis, but it would more than likely be temporary. I know your tumor is growing deep in the IAC. Do you know if it is growing laterally in the IAC? If so, then it might be impossible to visualize the entire tumor using the retrosigmoid approach and the doctor might end up having to expose the IAC in order to be certain he got the whole tumor, and you would lose your hearing anyway. And of course, even though the risk is lower, even the retrosigmoid approach carries the risk of temporary facial paralysis. The retrosigmoid approach also has a high risk of post-op headaches and CSF leaks. A large part of what determines facial issues is whether the facial nerve is very involved with the tumor and how sticky the tumor is. If it is very sticky, docs will usually leave a small piece of the tumor behind in order to spare the facial nerve. I believe the same is true if the tumor is wrapped around the facial nerve.
All of these considerations were what made me opt for middle fossa until I had a huge hearing drop. Once that happened and the steroid taper didn't bring my hearing back back, the only thing that made sense for me was translab. As it turned out, my hearing loss was due to a sudden growth spurt in my tumor (confirmed by MRI). Luckily, my tumor wasn't at all sticky and I had only a very minor issue with my right eye which resolved within the first few weeks after surgery.
Wendy
Wendy