Diabetes Insipidus After Endoscopic Endonasal Pituitary Macroadenoma Resection, Correlation of Patient and Surgery-Related Risk Factors
Jad Hosri, Christophe Abi Zeid Daou, Houssein Darwish, Zeina KorbanPurpose: To identify patient and surgery related factors that could predict the development of postoperative central diabetes insipidus (CDI). Methods: This is a retrospective case-control study conducted at a single-institution tertiary referral center. Patients undergoing endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery for pituitary adenoma between November 2018 and April 2023 were recruited. The main outcome measures collected include age, gender, comorbidities, tumor type, postoperative diabetes insipidus, intraoperative and postoperative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leak, flow of CSF leak, number of layers required for repair, the use of nasal packing, and hospital length of stay. Results: A total of 20 patients developed DI postoperatively. Patients demographic and comorbidity profile did not correlate with DI development. The encounter of an intraoperative CSF leak was correlated with post-op DI (X2(1) =18.35, p<0.001) with a RR of 2.7 (CI=1.37-5.28). The use of nasal packs was also correlated with post-op DI (X2(1) =10.17, p=0.001) with a RR of 1.8 (CI=1.15-2.87). Defects requiring a two or more layers for reconstruction also correlated with post-op DI compared to single layer repairs (X2(1) =12.15, p<0.001) irrelevant of the materials used. Development of DI post-op correlated with an increased hospital length of stay (t(64) = -3.35, p =0.001). Conclusion: The physician should be careful when evaluating patients with pituitary adenomas in the postoperative period, particularly those with intraoperative CSF leak, nasal packing, and those who underwent multilayer reconstruction of the surgical defect.