metastatic spine disease moderator jack rock, md department of neurosurgery henry ford health system
TRANSCRIPT
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Metastatic Spine Disease
Moderator Jack Rock, MD
Department of Neurosurgery
Henry Ford Health System
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• 61 year old female• History of breast Cancer, HTN• Back pain for 1 week
Case Presentation
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• No detectable weakness • Hypereflexia in lower extremities • Babinski
Case Presentation
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Case Presentation ( Please Choose appropriate case)
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Case Presentation
What would you do?
1- Medical treatment (Steroids, Pain Rx, Brace)2- Radiation therapy3- Surgical treatment (laminectomy ,Fusion) 4- Bone augmentation for non-surgical mets
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Electronic Voting
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Treatment options for Spine Metastasis and Spinal Cord Compression
Samuel Ryu, MDProfessor, Director of Radiosurgery
Radiation Oncology and NeurosurgeryHenry Ford Health System
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Treatment Pros Cons
Steroid Immediate neurologic relief Short duration
External beam radiotherapy
Main-stay treatmentPain reliefNeurologic improvementNon-invasive
Protracted coursePain recurrenceNeurologic progressionKnocks down bone marrow
Surgery (Circumferential decompression, Laminectomy)
Rapid neurologic improvementTissue diagnosis
Invasive Reconstruction is neededLong recovery timeNeeds radiotherapy
VertebroplastyPain reliefImprove spinal stability?
No tumor controlChemical leakage
Treatment of spine metastasis cord compression
Radiosurgery
Rapid pain & neurologic reliefSpinal cord decompressionNon-invasiveConvenienceBone marrow sparing
Cannot correct compression fracture or Spine instability
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Radiotherapy30 Gy in 10 fractions
Radiosurgery
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Rapid Pain Relief Durable Pain relief
1-yr pain control 84%
Phase II - Radiosurgery of Vertebral mets
Months after RS%
Pai
n re
lief
Median time to pain
relief 14 days
(Ryu et al. Pain Symp Manag, 2008)
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RTOG 0631Randomized Phase II/III Study ofRadiosurgery vs. EBRT for Localized Spine Metastasis
Solitary (1-3) spine metastasis
Radiosurgery (16 Gy)
Follow-up1. Pain score & QOL q month2. Clinical and neuro exams q month3. Imaging (MRI) q 2 months
EBRT8 Gy single dose
Single arm lead-in (49 pts)
Radiosurgery (16, 18 Gy)
2:1 Randomized (240 pts)
(1) (2) (3)
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12/4/04Breast cancer 16 Gy
1/29/05
Control of Spinal Cord Compression
90%
50%
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65 14% Epiduralvolume reduction
Thecal sac patency 553 % 773 %
Decompressive Radiosurgery
Epidural tumor size 0.840.07 mm2 0.410.06 mm2
Thecal sac area 1.060.06 mm2 1.390.10 mm2
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Patchel’s Phase III Trial Ryu’s Phase II Trial
S+RT RT Alone Radiosurgery
Overall Ambulatory rate
84% (42/50)
57% (29/51)
Overall Intact rate
81% (50/62)
Duration ambul 122 d 13 d
Ambulatory rate in ambulat pts
94% (32/34)
74% (26/35)
Intact rate in intact pts
88% (31/35)
Ambulatory rate from nonambulat
62% (10/16)
19% (3/16)
Intact rate from deficit
59% (19/27)
Comparison of Neurological Outcome
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Neurological Outcomeby Radiosurgical Decompression
Neuro before radiosurgeryNeuroafter RS No deficit Deficit
Normal 31 pts 16 pts
Improved - 3 pts Stable - 3 pts
Progressed 4 pts 5 pts
Total 35 pts 27 pts
19% (12/62)Progress
81% of total ptsimprove
(Ryu, Cancer 2010)
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Radiographic Grade
0I
IIIV, V
III
Dual grading system of metastatic epidural compression
a No abnormality
b Minor symptoms (eg, pain, radiculopathy, sensory change)
c Functional paresis Muscle power ≥ 4/5.
-nerve root sign or spinal cord sign-functional in the upper extremity-ambulatory in the lower extremity
d Non-Functional paresisMuscle power ≤3/5.
-non-functional in the upper extrem-non-ambulatory in the lower extrem
e Paralysis, Incontinence
Neurological Grade
0 Spine bone involved only
I Thecal sac impinged
II Thecal sac compressed
III Spinal cord impinged
IV Cord displaced/compressed, CSF visible between cord and tumor, Partial block
V CSF not visible, Complete block
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Treatment for Canal Compromise at Henry Ford
7/08 10/08
Renal cell ca, T12, Grade 4b, 18 Gy
For radiosurgery
Spinal cord compression in ambulatory patients (≥ 4/5 power)
Imaging : No upper limit to the extent of spinal cord compression at this time
For surgery
Significant neurological deficit (≤ 3/5 motor power)
Compression fracture with bony retropulsion
Spinal instability
Grade 2a, Neuro intact
3 mon
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Surgical Options for Spine Metastases
Ian Lee, MDStaff Neurosurgeon
Hermelin Brain Tumor CenterHenry Ford Health System
September 21, 2012Comprehensive Spine Symposium
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Disclosures
None
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
Up to 35% of cancer patients will develop spine metastases
>20,000 new cases each year
Multiple levels of involvement in 40-70%
12-20% of patients will present with spine symptoms as first manifestation of cancer
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Spine Metastases
Because most mets originate in the vertebral body, the site of compression is usually ventral
Tumor infiltration can also cause mechanical instability due to weakening of the bone
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
In the past, treatment was primarily radiation
Surgery sometimes offered, but without significant benefit
Retrospective studies demonstrated laminectomy resulted in neurologic improvement in a minority of patients and unsustained (Sorensen et al 1990, Constans et al 1983)
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
In addition, outcomes compared to EBRT were equivalent with or without laminectomy (Byrne 1992, Young et al 1980)
Thus, nihilistic attitude regarding role of surgery in metastatic spine disease
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
In 1980’s, newer techniques of surgery allowed for more aggressive extirpation of disease and reconstruction
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
RCT recently demonstrated superiority of sugical decompression + EBRT vs. EBRT alone (Patchell, Lancet 2005)
Surgery + EBRT both preserved and regained ambulation better than EBRT
First Class I study demonstrating advantage of surgery in treatment of metastatic disease
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
However, surgery is not without drawbacks– Morbidity as high as 20% in some series– Prolonged hospital time, rehabilitation time
Many patients cannot or are unwilling to tolerate surgery
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Surgery for Spine metastasesRecommendations
Indications for surgery:– Rapid neurologic deterioration– Mechanical instability– Intractable radicular pain/myelopathy– Compression due to bony retropulsion– Relatively limited extant of bony disease/compression– Relatively limited extraspinal disease/good performance status– Prognosis > 3 months
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Surgery for Spine Metastases
Surgical Approaches now available:– Posterior
Laminectomy
– PosterolateralTranspedicular
Costotransversectomy
Lateral Extracavitary
– Lateral/AnteriorRetroperitoneal
Transthoracic
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Posterior approach
Advantages: Familiar approach, less invasive/morbidDisadvantages: Does not directly address pathology, can cause instability
Has fallen out of favor in the surgical treatment of metastatic disease
from “Review: complications of surgery for thoracic disc disease”.Fessler RG, Sturgill M.Surg Neurol. 1998 Jun;49(6):609-18
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Anterior/Lateral Approach
Advantages: Directly address pathology
Disadvantages: Requires two-stage operation
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Posterolateral Approaches
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Surgical Approach
Posterolateral approaches (transpedicular, costotransversectomy) have become increasing popular
Allows for circumferential decompression and stabilization
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Posterolateral approach
Requires working around the spinal cord and sacrifice of nerve roots– Less common surgical approach, technically
demanding– Small risk of cord infarct with nerve root
sacrifice (esp. mid-lower thoracic)
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Surgical technique – Transpedicular/Costotransversectomy
From Wang et al. March 2004.J Neurosurg Spine. 2004 Oct;1(3):287-98.
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Surgical technique – Transpedicular decompression
From Wang et al. March 2004.J Neurosurg Spine. 2004 Oct;1(3):287-98.
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Surgical technique - Stabilization
From Wang et al. March 2004.J Neurosurg Spine. 2004 Oct;1(3):287-98.
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Surgery for Spine Metastases Conclusions
For patients with good performance status and relatively limited disease, surgery should be strongly considered
Order of surgery vs RT should be considered as well– Preop RT increases complication rate of
surgery
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Surgery for Spine MetastasesCurrent/Future InvestigationsMore aggressive surgical extirpation – e.g. en bloc spondylectomy– Does histology matter?
Less aggressive surgical decompression followed by SRS
Intraoperative radiotherapy
Phase III trials comparing SRS and surgery
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Spine Metastases - ReferencesConstans JP, de Divitiis E, Donzelli R, et al: Spinal metastases with neurological manifestations. Review of 600 cases.
J Neurosurg 59:111–118, 1983
Sorensen S, Borgesen SE, Rhode K, et al: Metastatic epidural spinal cord compression. Results of treatment and survival. Cancer 65:1502–1508, 1990
Byrne TN: Spinal cord compression from epidural metastases. N Engl J Med 327:614–619, 1992
Young RF, Post EM, King GA: Treatment of spinal epidural metastases. Randomized prospective comparison of laminectomy and radiotherapy. J Neurosurg 53:741–748, 1980
Patchell RA, Tibbs PA, Regine WF, et al: Direct decompressive surgical resection in the treatment of spinal cord compression caused by metastatic cancer: a randomised trial. Lancet. 2005 Aug 20-26;366(9486):643-8
Ghogawala Z, Mansfield FL, Borges LF: Spinal radiation before surgical decompression adversely affects outcomes of surgery for symptomatic metastatic spinal cord compression. Spine (Phila. Pa 1976) 26(7), 818–824, 2001
Shiue K, Sahgal A, Chow E, Lutz ST, Chang EL, Mayr NA, Wang JZ, Cavaliere R, Mendel E, Lo SS: Management of metastatic spinal cord compression . Expert Rev Anticancer Ther. 10(5):697-708, 2010
Jacobs WB, Perrin RG. Evaluation and treatment of spinal metastases: an overview. Neurosurg Focus. 15;11(6):e10, 2001
Fessler RG, Sturgill. Review: complications of surgery for thoracic disc disease. M.Surg Neurol. 1998 Jun;49(6):609-18
Wang JC, Boland P, Mitra N, Yamada Y, Lis E, Stubblefield M, Bilsky MH. Single-stage posterolateral transpedicular approach for resection of epidural metastatic spine tumors involving the vertebral body with circumferential reconstruction: results in 140 patients. Invited submission from the Joint Section Meeting on Disorders of the Spine and Peripheral Nerves, March 2004.J Neurosurg Spine. 2004 Oct;1(3):287-98.
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Bone Augmentation For Non-surgical Mets
Yahya Albeer, MD
Department of Radiology
Henry Ford Health System
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Metastatic Bone DiseaseTreatment Goals
• Reduce pain• Eradicate or reduce tumor when primary
tumors are involved • Prevent neurologic complications • Treat pathologic fractures and prevent
recurrent fracture
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Primary and Metastatic Bone DiseaseAvailable Treatments - Other1
• Radiation Therapy– Therapeutic: Reduce tumor in primary bone
cancer– Palliative: Relieve pain related to bone metastasis
• Surgery– To provide stability to compromised bone– To prevent neurologic deterioration after fracture
1. American Cancer Society, 2006.
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Results for Tumor Treatment
• Kyphoplasty and Vertebroplasty similar• Pain relief in 75-85% of malignant lesions
treated with vertebroplasty• The presence of epidural tissue does NOT
preclude treatment*• Shimony et al Radiology 2004;232:846-853• Fourney et al J Neurosurg (Spine 1) 2003; 98:21-30• J Clin Neurosci 2011 Jun;18(6):763-7. Epub 2011 Apr 19.• J Surg Oncol 2010 Jul 1;102(1):43-7.• Radiology 2010;254(3):882-890• AJNR 2007;28: 570-574
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Q&A
Jack Rock, M.D.
Department of Neurosurgery
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Metastatic Spine Disease: Conclusions
Most patients with metastatic disease involving the spine will be managed effectively either with observation or radiation
For patients with spinal cord compression and rapidly progressing neurological deterioration or significant neurological compromise (i.e., non-ambulatory), tailored surgical decompression +/- fusion remains the gold standard
For ambulatory patients with spinal cord compression, radiosurgery is proving to be effective in most cases
As a treatment for painful spinal metastases vertebro- and kyphoplasty are effective augmentation procedures
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Thank you