A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Incidence of adult tonsillectomy for hypertrophic indications in Southwest Finland




AuthorsSjöblom, Henrik M.; Knubb, Jenny C.; Kauko, Tommi; Pulkkinen, Jaakko; Piitulainen, Jaakko M.

PublisherInforma UK Limited

Publishing placeABINGDON

Publication year2025

JournalActa Oto-Laryngologica

Journal name in sourceActa Oto-Laryngologica

Journal acronymACTA OTO-LARYNGOL

Volume145

Issue2

First page 176

Last page180

Number of pages5

ISSN0001-6489

eISSN1651-2251

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/00016489.2024.2448823(external)

Web address https://doi.org/10.1080/00016489.2024.2448823(external)


Abstract

Background

Large palatine tonsils cause a variety of symptoms including obstructive sleep apnea and snoring. In adults, the prevalence of tonsillar hypertrophy remains uncertain.

Aims

We estimated the incidence of tonsillectomy for adult palatine tonsillar hypertrophy using population data and retrospective patient charts.

Material and Methods

Patient data were retrospectively collected between 2004 and 2018 in the Hospital District of Southwest Finland. Adult patients with tonsil hypertrophy, obstructive sleep apnea or mouth breathing/snoring as an indication for surgery were included. Data were verified from patient charts. To determine in adults the incidence of tonsillectomy for tonsillar hypertrophy, the number of surgeries was compared to population data.

Results

The incidence of tonsillectomy for adult tonsillar hypertrophy was 8.49 per 100000 person-years. In our hospital district, 9.5% of adults who underwent tonsil surgery had tonsillar hypertrophy. The incidence rate reduced with age. The most common indication for surgery of hypertrophic tonsils was snoring (30.8%). In this study, 12.7% of patients with asymmetric tonsils had malignancy with the most common being lymphoma.

Conclusions and Significance

Symptomatic adult tonsil hypertrophy remains rare. In adults, tonsil asymmetry should invoke a suspicion of lymphoma. Even during adulthood, as age increases, tonsillar hypertrophy becomes less common.


Funding information in the publication
The study was supported by The Finnish ORL-HNS Foundation.


Last updated on 2025-18-03 at 14:09