View clinical trials related to Inverted Papilloma.
Filter by:This is a retrospective case series study. The Draf III procedure exposes excessive bare bone, resulting in frontal ostium restenosis and surgical failure. For tumors originating from frontal sinus, especially inverted papillomas, abrading of bone around frontal ostium often exacerbate the restenosis. This study aims to retrospectly recruit patients with frontal sinus inverted papillomas who received Draf III procedure in our center during 2015-2021 and investigated the efficacy of a novel pedicled nasoseptal flap for endoscopic frontal sinus procedures. Each subject received a CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans before operation. The subjects were followed up postoperative for at least 12 months to check the epithelization status and whether the neo-ostium were patent.
In sinonasal inverted papilloma (SNIP) it is very challenging to discriminate between tumor and surrounding tissue. Local recurrence is a frequent phenomenon as it occurs in 16.5% of the cases. There is need for an instrument that is able to guide the surgeon in removing all tumor tissue, whereas resection of healthy tissue is minimalized. Molecular fluorescence guided surgery enables the visualization of targeted tumor-specific biomarkers by using fluorescence, thereby enhancing the contrast between normal mucosa and tumor tissue. The objective of this feasibility study is to determine if the intravenously administered conjugate bevacizumab-IRDye800CW accumulates more in SNIP than in normal sinonasal epithelium.