Improvement of Sleep Quality in Isolated Metastatic Patients with Spinal Cord Compression after Surgery

Author:

Cao Shuang1,Xin Baoquan2,Yu Yue3,Peng Cheng1,Zhu Chengzhang1,Deng Mengqiu4,Gao Xin1,Chu Jianjun5,Liu Tielong1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopedics, Changzheng Hospital, Naval Medical University

2. School of Health Science and Engineering, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology

3. Department of Anesthesiology, Chaohu Hospital of Anhui Medical University

4. Department of Anesthesiology, Changzheng Hospital, Naval Medical University

5. Department of Orthopedics, the Second People’s Hospital of Hefei

Abstract

Abstract Background This study aimed to assess changes in quality of sleep (QoS) in isolated metastatic patients with spinal cord compression following two different surgical treatments and identify potential contributing factors associated with QoS improvement. Methods We reviewed 49 patients with isolated spinal metastasis at our spinal tumor center between December 2017 and May 2021. Total en bloc spondylectomy (TES) and palliative surgery with postoperative stereotactic radiosurgery (PSRS) were performed on 26 and 23 patients, respectively. We employed univariate and multivariate analyses to identify the potential prognostic factors affecting QoS. Results The total Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) score improved significantly six months after surgery. Univariate analysis indicated that age, pain worsening at night, decrease in visual analog scale (VAS), increase in Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance score (ECOG-PS), artificial implant in focus, and decrease in epidural spinal cord compression (ESCC) scale values were potential contributing factors for QoS. Multivariate analysis indicated that the ESCC scale score decreased as an independent prognostic factor. Conclusions Patients with spinal cord compression caused by the metastatic disease had significantly improved QoS after TES and PSRS treatment. Moreover, a decrease in ESCC scale value of > 1 was identified as a favorable contributing factor associated with PSQI improvement. In addition, TES and PSRS can prevent recurrence by achieving efficient local tumor control to improve indirect sleep. Accordingly, timely and effective surgical decompression and recurrence control are critical for improving sleep quality.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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