Does the Region of the Spine Involved with Metastatic Tumor Affect Outcomes of Surgical Treatments?
Aged
Blood Loss, Surgical
Cervical Vertebrae
/ pathology
Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant
Combined Modality Therapy
Decompression, Surgical
Female
Humans
Length of Stay
Lumbar Vertebrae
/ pathology
Male
Middle Aged
Neurosurgery
/ methods
Operative Time
Pain, Postoperative
/ drug therapy
Postoperative Complications
/ epidemiology
Retrospective Studies
Spinal Neoplasms
/ secondary
Spine
/ pathology
Survival Analysis
Thoracic Vertebrae
/ pathology
Treatment Outcome
Cervical vertebrae
Combined modality therapy
Length of stay
Lumbar vertebrae
Neoplastic processes
Spinal neoplasms
Survival prognosis
Journal
World neurosurgery
ISSN: 1878-8769
Titre abrégé: World Neurosurg
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101528275
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
12 2021
12 2021
Historique:
received:
12
04
2021
revised:
02
09
2021
accepted:
03
09
2021
pubmed:
17
9
2021
medline:
14
1
2022
entrez:
16
9
2021
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Spinal metastases occur primarily in the thoracic spine (50%-60%), less commonly in the lumbar (30%-35%), and, infrequently, in the cervical spine (10%-15%). There has been only 1 study with a limited population comparing the postoperative outcome among cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine metastasis. The aim of this study is to identify whether the region of surgically treated spinal metastasis affects postoperative outcomes. A retrospective study of patients with spinal metastasis was performed. The collected data were as follows: age, gender, smoking history, tumor histology, revised Tokuhashi score, preoperative and postoperative American Spinal Injury Association score, region of spinal metastasis, ambulatory status, surgical approach, surgery time, blood loss, complications, length of hospital stay, postoperative pain relief, postoperative adjuvant therapy, and survival. Data were analyzed to identify the factors affecting the survival and postoperative functional outcome. We studied 191 patients with spinal metastasis including 47 cervical spine metastases, 96 thoracic spine metastases, and 48 lumbar spine metastases, with a mean age of 60.91 ± 9.72 years. The overall median survival was 7 months (95% confidence interval, 2.9-20.63 months). Univariate analysis showed that region of the spine involved with metastasis did not significantly affect the survival and postoperative motor function improvement. Multivariate analysis showed that revised Tokuhashi score, postoperative radiotherapy, and postoperative chemotherapy were independent factors affecting survival. The rate of 30-day complications among patients with different regions of spine metastasis did not reach significance. The postoperative outcomes of patients undergoing surgery for metastases are not affected by the region of the spine.
Identifiants
pubmed: 34530150
pii: S1878-8750(21)01352-8
doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.09.014
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
e139-e151Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.