Literature DB >> 22919567

Complications in the management of metastatic spinal disease.

Eilis Catherine Dunning1, Joseph Simon Butler, Seamus Morris.   

Abstract

Metastatic spine disease accounts for 10% to 30% of new cancer diagnoses annually. The most frequent presentation is axial spinal pain. No treatment has been proven to increase the life expectancy of patients with spinal metastasis. The goals of therapy are pain control and functional preservation. The most important prognostic indicator for spinal metastases is the initial functional score. Treatment is multidisciplinary, and virtually all treatment is palliative. Management is guided by three key issues; neurologic compromise, spinal instability, and individual patient factors. Site-directed radiation, with or without chemotherapy is the most commonly used treatment modality for those patients presenting with spinal pain, causative by tumours which are not impinging on neural elements. Operative intervention has, until recently been advocated for establishing a tissue diagnosis, mechanical stabilization and for reduction of tumor burden but not for a curative approach. It is treatment of choice patients with diseaseadvancement despite radiotherapy and in those with known radiotherapy-resistant tumors. Vertebral resection and anterior stabilization with methacrylate or hardware (e.g., cages) has been advocated.Surgical decompression and stabilization, however, along with radiotherapy, may provide the most promising treatment. It stabilizes the metastatic deposited areaand allows ambulation with pain relief. In general, patients who are nonambulatory at diagnosis do poorly, as do patients in whom more than one vertebra is involved. Surgical intervention is indicated in patients with radiation-resistant tumors, spinal instability, spinal compression with bone or disk fragments, progressive neurologic deterioration, previous radiation exposure, and uncertain diagnosis that requires tissue diagnosis. The main goal in the management of spinal metastatic deposits is always palliative rather than curative, with the primary aim being pain relief and improved mobility. This however, does not come without complications, regardless of the surgical intervention technique used. These complication range from the general surgical complications of bleeding, infection, damage to surrounding structures and post operative DT/PE to spinal specific complications of persistent neurologic deficit and paralysis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Complications; Metastases; Spine

Year:  2012        PMID: 22919567      PMCID: PMC3425630          DOI: 10.5312/wjo.v3.i8.114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Orthop        ISSN: 2218-5836


  65 in total

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  7 in total

1.  Predictors for surgical complications of en bloc resections in the spine: review of 220 cases treated by the same team.

Authors:  Stefano Boriani; Alessandro Gasbarrini; Stefano Bandiera; Riccardo Ghermandi; Ran Lador
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Review 3.  Surgical Intervention vs. Radiation Therapy: The Shifting Paradigm in Treating Metastatic Spinal Disease.

Authors:  Robert Le; Jeremy D Tran; Mel Lizaso; Ramin Beheshti; Austin Moats
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2018-10-03

4.  Characteristics and Predictors of Radiographic Local Failure in Patients With Spinal Metastases Treated With Palliative Conventional Radiation Therapy.

Authors:  Jie Jane Chen; Adam J Sullivan; Diana D Shi; Monica S Krishnan; Lauren M Hertan; Claudia S Roldan; Mai Anh Huynh; Alexander Spektor; M Mohsin Fareed; Tai Chung Lam; Tracy A Balboni
Journal:  Adv Radiat Oncol       Date:  2021-02-07

5.  Hardware Failure in Spinal Tumor Surgery: A Hallmark of Longer Survival?

Authors:  Nikita Zaborovskii; Adam Schlauch; Dmitrii Ptashnikov; Dmitrii Mikaylov; Sergei Masevnin; Oleg Smekalenkov; John Shapton; Dimitriy Kondrashov
Journal:  Neurospine       Date:  2022-03-31

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Authors:  Jingfeng Li; Lei Yan; Jianping Wang; Lin Cai; Dongcai Hu
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Journal:  Palliat Med Rep       Date:  2020-07-31
  7 in total

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