This is a real pity, since Shahinian's paper entitled "527 Full Endoscopic Resection of Vestibular Schwannomas"
http://fhs.mcmaster.ca/neurosurgery/documents/s-0031-1275335-acoustic.pdf from 2011 was encouraging. The results are reported as:
"Utilizing the fully endoscopic technique, 94% of tumors were completely removed; subtotal removal was performed in 6% of patients in an attempt to preserve their hearing. Anatomic preservation of the facial nerve was achieved in all of the patients. Functionally, measurable hearing (serviceable / some) was preserved in 57% of cases that had either “serviceable” or “some” hearing pre-operatively. There were no major neurological complications such as quadriparesis, hemiparesis, bacterial or aseptic meningitis, permanent lower cranial nerve deficits, or deaths."This looked good, however now the credibility of the information is in questions. If it is questionable, how could the paper be published in the journal Minimally Invasive Neurosurgery? This has even wider implications in the credibility of any publication!
Looking for balance, I examined, "Facial Nerve Outcome after Vestibular Schwannoma Resection: A comparative Meta-Analysis of Endoscopic versus Open Retrosigmoid Approach"
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4375046/ published November 2014.
It states
"Good facial nerve outcome was achieved in 67% of the open series patients and in 94% of the endoscopic series patients. Other outcomes in the open and endoscopic series were the following: gross total resection, 91% versus 97%; functional hearing, 22.6% versus 46%; wound infection, 1.3% versus 2.6%; and recurrence, 5.4% versus 2.2%" Not mentioned in the abstract, death was at 0.9% for open surgery, versus 0% for endoscopic.
Also, "Endoscopic Resection of Vestibular Schwannoma" published January 2015
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26225307 ; admittedly, for only 12 patients.
The results were
"All patients successfully underwent gross total resection. Facial nerve preservation rate was 92% with 11 of 12 patients retaining an HB score of 1/6 postoperatively. Hearing preservation rate was 67% with 8 of 12 patients maintaining a stable AAO-HNS grade and GR score at follow-up. Mean tumor size was 1.5 cm (range: 1-2 cm). No patients experienced postoperative cerebrospinal fluid leak, infection, or cranial nerve palsy for a complication rate of 0%. Mean operative time was 261.6 minutes with an estimated blood loss of 56.3 mL and average length of hospital stay of 3.6 days" and the conclusion
"A purely endoscopic approach is a safe and effective option for hearing preservation surgery for vestibular schwannomas in appropriately selected patients" There is a more recent paper, which is not at my fingertips, which states that in order for surgery to remain competitive with radiosurgery, new techniques, including endoscopic, need to be explored.
Maybe we shouldn't throw the baby (fully endoscopic surgery) out with the bathwater (Dr Shahinian).