Anatomical determinants of occipitocervical fusion in skull base chordoma resection: a systematic review of the literature with illustrative cases

Author:

Golub Danielle1,Küffer Alexander F.1,Garrel Shimon2,Zandpazandi Sara3,McBriar Joshua D.4,Modi Siddhi5,Papadimitriou Kyriakos1,Costantino Peter D.6,Sciubba Daniel M.1,Dehdashti Amir R.16

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Northwell Health, Manhasset, New York;

2. SUNY Downstate College of Medicine, Brooklyn, New York;

3. Department of Neurological Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina;

4. Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra University/Northwell Health, Hempstead, New York;

5. New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine, Old Westbury, New York; and

6. Department of Otolaryngology, Northwell Health, New Hyde Park, New York

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Skull base chordomas are rare, locally osseo-destructive lesions that present unique surgical challenges due to their involvement of critical neurovascular and bony structures at the craniovertebral junction (CVJ). Radical cytoreductive surgery improves survival but also carries significant morbidity, including the potential for occipitocervical (OC) destabilization requiring instrumented fusion. The published experience on OC fusion after CVJ chordoma resection is limited, and the anatomical predictors of OC instability in this context remain unclear. METHODS PubMed and Embase were systematically searched according to the PRISMA guidelines for studies describing skull base chordoma resection and OC fusion. The search strategy was predefined in the authors’ PROSPERO protocol (CRD42024496158). RESULTS The systematic review identified 11 surgical case series describing 209 skull base chordoma patients and 116 (55.5%) who underwent OC instrumented fusion. Most patients underwent lateral approaches (n = 82) for chordoma resection, followed by midline (n = 48) and combined (n = 6) approaches. OC fusion was most often performed as a second-stage procedure (n = 53), followed by single-stage resection and fusion (n = 38). The degree of occipital condyle resection associated with OC fusion was described in 9 studies: total unilateral condylectomy reliably predicted OC fusion regardless of surgical approach. After lateral transcranial approaches, 4 studies cited at least 50%–70% unilateral condylectomy as necessitating OC fusion. After midline approaches—most frequently the endoscopic endonasal approach (EEA)—at least 75% unilateral condylectomy (or 50% bilateral condylectomy) led to OC fusion. Additionally, resection of the medial atlantoaxial joint elements (the C1 anterior arch and tip of the dens), usually via EEA, reliably necessitated OC fusion. Two illustrative cases are subsequently presented, further exemplifying how the extent of CVJ bony elements removed via EEA to achieve complete chordoma resection predicts the need for OC fusion. CONCLUSIONS Unilateral total condylectomy, 50% bilateral condylectomy, and resection of the medial atlantoaxial joint elements were the most frequently described independent predictors of OC fusion in skull base chordoma resection. Additionally, consistent with the occipital condyle harboring a significantly thicker joint capsule at its posterolateral aspect, an anterior midline approach seems to tolerate a greater degree of condylar resection (75%) than a lateral transcranial approach (50%–70%) prior to generating OC instability.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Reference65 articles.

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5. Total en bloc spondylectomy for locally aggressive and primary malignant tumors of the lumbar spine;Sciubba DM,2016

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