| Literature DB >> 35740517 |
Satoshi Kato1, Satoru Demura1, Hideki Murakami2, Kazuya Shinmura1, Noriaki Yokogawa1, Ryohei Annen1, Motoya Kobayashi1, Yohei Yamada1, Satoshi Nagatani1, Norio Kawahara3, Hiroyuki Tsuchiya1.
Abstract
The prolonged survival of metastatic cancer patients highlights the importance of the local control of spinal metastases, which reduce patient performance status. This retrospective study examined the medium to long-term outcomes of spinal metastasectomy by evaluating 124 patients who underwent metastasectomy for isolated spinal metastases (2006-2018) with a postoperative follow-up for a minimum of 3 years. The findings present information on patient demographics (i.e., performance status, location of non-spinal metastases, and history of systemic therapy) and postoperative outcomes, including perioperative complications, disease progression of non-operated metastases, and additional excisional surgeries. Additionally, postoperative survival, local tumor control in the operated spine, and maintenance of spinal reconstruction without instrumentation failure were determined using Kaplan-Meier analyses. The primary malignancy was kidney and thyroid cancer in 51 and 14 patients, respectively, low-grade sarcoma and lung cancer in 13 patients, breast cancer in 12 patients, and other malignancies in 21 patients. The 3-year and 5-year survival rates were 70% and 60%, respectively. We found that patients with thyroid cancer had the best survival results, with local tumor recurrence and instrumentation failure at 10% and 22%, respectively. These findings suggest that for certain patients with isolated and removable spine metastases, metastasectomy can improve function and survival.Entities:
Keywords: clinical outcome; complication; metastasectomy; spinal metastasis; survival rate
Year: 2022 PMID: 35740517 PMCID: PMC9221216 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14122852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575