Does surgery for metastatic spinal tumors improve functional outcomes in patients without spinal cord compression but with potentially unstable spines (SINS 7–12)?

Author:

Vargas Enrique1,Shabani Saman1,Mummaneni Praveen V.1,Park Christine1,Rechav Ben-Natan Alma1,Rivera Joshua J.1,Huang Jeremy1,Berven Sigurd2,Braunstein Steve3,Chou Dean14

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurological Surgery,

2. Orthopedic Surgery, and

3. Radiation Oncology, University of California, San Francisco, California; and

4. Department of Neurological Surgery, Columbia University, New York, New York

Abstract

OBJECTIVE In the absence of spinal cord compression, it is unclear if surgery is more effective than radiation treatment for improving functional outcomes in metastatic spinal tumor patients with potentially unstable spines. The authors compared functional status outcomes assessed with Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) scores after surgery or radiation in patients without spinal cord compression with Spine Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) values of 7–12 indicating possible instability (SINS 7–12). METHODS A retrospective review was performed of patients with metastatic spinal tumor SINS values of 7–12 at a single institution between 2004 and 2014. Patients were divided into two different groups: 1) those treated with surgery and 2) those treated with radiation. Baseline clinical characteristics were measured, and KPS and ECOG scores were obtained pre- and postradiation or postsurgery. The paired, nonparametric Wilcoxon signed-rank test and ordinal logistic regression analysis were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS A total of 162 patients met inclusion criteria; 63 patients were treated operatively and 99 patients were treated with radiation. The mean follow-up was 1.9 years, with a median of 1.1 years for the surgical cohort (ranging from 2.5 months to 13.8 years) and a mean of 2 years with a median of 0.8 years for the radiation cohort (ranging from 2 months to 9.3 years). After covariates were accounted for, the average posttreatment changes in KPS scores in the surgical cohort were 7.46 ± 17.3 and in the radiation cohort were −2 ± 13.6 (p = 0.045). No significant difference was observed in ECOG scores. KPS scores improved postoperatively in 60.3% of patients in the surgical group and postradiation in 32.3% of patients in the radiation cohort (p < 0.001). Subanalysis within the radiation cohort revealed no differences in fracture rates or local control between patients treated with external-beam radiation therapy versus stereotactic body radiation therapy. In patients initially treated with radiation, 21.2% eventually developed compression fractures at a treated level. Five of the 99 patients in the radiation cohort—all of whom had a fracture—eventually underwent either methyl methacrylate augmentation or instrumented fusion. CONCLUSIONS Patients with SINS values of 7–12 who underwent surgery had greater improvement in KPS scores—but not in ECOG scores—than patients undergoing radiation alone. In patients treated with radiation, treatment was converted to a procedural intervention such as surgery only in patients who sustained fractures. Of the patients with fractures after radiation (21 of 99), 5 patients underwent an invasive procedure and 16 did not.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference26 articles.

1. Direct decompressive surgical resection in the treatment of spinal cord compression caused by metastatic cancer: a randomised trial;Patchell RA,2005

2. The NOMS framework: approach to the treatment of spinal metastatic tumors;Laufer I,2013

3. A novel classification system for spinal instability in neoplastic disease: an evidence-based approach and expert consensus from the Spine Oncology Study Group;Fisher CG,2010

4. Outcomes and survival of spinal metastasis with epidural compression;Candido PBM,2021

5. Spinal manifestation of malignant primary (PLB) and secondary bone lymphoma (SLB);Barz M,2021

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