| Literature DB >> 30808868 |
Charalampia Kyriakou1,2, Sean Molloy3, Frank Vrionis4, Ronald Alberico5, Leonard Bastian6, Jeffrey A Zonder7, Sergio Giralt8, Noopur Raje9, Robert A Kyle10, David G D Roodman11, Meletios A Dimopoulos12, S Vincent Rajkumar13, Brian B G Durie14, Evangelos Terpos12.
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) represents approximately 15% of haematological malignancies and most of the patients present with bone involvement. Focal or diffuse spinal osteolysis may result in significant morbidity by causing painful progressive vertebral compression fractures (VCFs) and deformities. Advances in the systemic treatment of myeloma have achieved high response rates and prolonged the survival significantly. Early diagnosis and management of skeletal events contribute to improving the prognosis and quality of life of MM patients. The management of patients with significant pain due to VCFs in the acute phase is not standardised. While some patients are successfully treated conservatively, and pain relief is achieved within a few weeks, a large percentage has disabling pain and morbidity and hence they are considered for surgical intervention. Balloon kyphoplasty and percutaneous vertebroplasty are minimally invasive procedures which have been shown to relieve pain and restore function. Despite increasing positive evidence for the use of these procedures, the indications, timing, efficacy, safety and their role in the treatment algorithm of myeloma spinal disease are yet to be elucidated. This paper reports an update of the consensus statement from the International Myeloma Working Group on the role of cement augmentation in myeloma patients with VCFs.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30808868 PMCID: PMC6391474 DOI: 10.1038/s41408-019-0187-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Cancer J ISSN: 2044-5385 Impact factor: 11.037
Indications for cement augmentation
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| • Persistent significant pain from a fractured vertebral body confirmed on MRI scanning with STIR images. This fracture could be acute, sub-acute or chronic (often has a fracture cleft) and has not healed |
| • Persistent significant symptoms which have not resolved with normal conservative measures after 4 weeks of treatment affecting daily activities |
| • Significant pain due to a fractured vertebral body affecting activity |
| • Significant pain associated with significant change in disability in conjunction with a new event |
| • Acute patient-delayed for medical reasons |
| • Selective chronic fractures |
| • Complications for myeloma should be treated first and pain is not defined by a specific VAS number |
| • Timing is important, especially newly diagnosed patients. Immediate referral for treatment for very severe pain requiring high dose of analgesics |
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| • Fracture of the thoracolumbar junction (T10–L2) that could result in a significant kyphotic deformity and therefore morbidity |
| • Loss of vertebral body height (progressive as evidenced by sequential erect x-rays) |
| • Posterior wall defect or destruction of a pedicle/pars which may potentially render the affected area of the spine unstable and at risk of fracture/neurological insult new tumour classification system to delineate vertebral bodies at risk of impending fracture as a result of metastatic spinal disease[ |
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| • Fracture at T10–L2 (thoraco-lumbar junction) consider cement augmentation; below L2 is not as significant |
| • Only if progression over time; follow up with standard x-rays every 1–3 months |
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| • Need to take into consideration the aggressive nature of the disease and patient activity |
| • “Impending fractures” hard to determine |
| • Need for clinical trials |
Immediate vertebral cement augmentation
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| • However, often patients can be temporally stabilised in thermostatic TLSO (thoracolumbar sacro orthosis) to adequately control their pain while medical management is initiated |
| • Following 1–2 cycles of chemotherapy if patients present with poor performance status, septic, or have hyperviscosity problems that can be contraindications to undergo the procedure. Patients can be still treated with cement augmentation if still clinically indicated. The analgesics, bisphosphonate and chemotherapy treatment can provide pain relief and may alleviate some of the fracture pain. |
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| • Patients with VCFs that are borderline should be treated with chemotherapy, bisphosphonates and conventional pain relief measures and if these fail then cement augmentation should be considered. If the pain persists or worsens or there is a risk for further vertebral collapse, then early intervention is required if stabilising the spinal structure and/or restoring the vertebral body height are critical. |
| • If the pain persists at the site of a previously diagnosed fracture the cement augmentation is still indicated if the pain is thought to be fracture and not facet joint related pain. These patients often have a fracture cleft in the vertebral body on the MRI imaging. |
| • VAS 1–3 Watchful surveillance with periodic skeletal survey (or other imaging as appropriate) |
VAS visual analogue pain scores, VCF vertebral compression fractures
Fig. 1Myeloma Spinal Pathway.
a Myeloma spinal pathway for myeloma patients presenting with spinal disease with no neurological symptoms. b Myeloma spinal pathway for myeloma patients presenting with spinal disease and associated neurological symptoms
Fig. 2A 57-year-old male presented with bilateral leg weakness (3/5 MRC), sensory disturbances and back pain, catheterised with good anal tone.
a Initial MRI revealed T10 collapse with tumour in canal causing spinal cord compression. b Soft tissue CT windowing confirmed that it was soft tissue tumour without bone element in the spinal canal. The patient was treated with dexamethasone and radiotherapy for cord compression, had TLSO brace fitted for relative stability and received 2 cycles of chemotherapy for kappa light chain myeloma. c MRI was repeated for persistent severe back pain (VAS 8/10) and reassessment of cord compression. Clinically power was 5/5 in both legs. The MRI confirmed soft tissue mass response and spinal stability. Patient had cement augmentation with BKP at T10 to relieve the pain and 24 h later VAS was 1/10