Kwan William Chu, Zuckerman Scott L, Fisher Charles G, Laufer Ilya, Chou Dean, O'Toole John E, Schultheiss Markus, Weber Michael H, Sciubba Daniel M, Pahuta Markian, Shin John H, Fehlings Michael G, Versteeg Anne, Goodwin Matthew L, Boriani Stefano, Bettegowda Chetan, Lazary Aron, Gasbarrini Alessandro, Reynolds Jeremy J, Verlaan Jorrit-Jan, Sahgal Arjun, Gokaslan Ziya L, Rhines Laurence D, Dea Nicolas
Combined Neurosurgical and Orthopedic Spine Program, Department of Orthopedics Surgery, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Neurological Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Global Spine J. 2025 Jan;15(1_suppl):132S-142S. doi: 10.1177/21925682231220551.
Systematic review.
In patients with extradural metastatic spine disease, we sought to systematically review the outcomes and complications of patients with intermediate Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) lesions undergoing radiation therapy, percutaneous interventions, minimally invasive surgeries, or open spinal surgeries.
Following PRISMA guidelines for systematic reviews, MEDLINE, EMBASE, Web of Science, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the Cochrane Center Register of Controlled Trials were queried for studies that reported on SINS intermediate patients who underwent: 1) radiotherapy, 2) percutaneous intervention, 3) minimally invasive, or 4) open surgery. Dates of publication were between 2013-22. Patients with low- or high-grade SINS were excluded. Outcome measures were pain score, functional status, neurological outcome, ambulation, survival, and perioperative complications.
Thirty-nine studies (n = 4554) were included that analyzed outcomes in the SINS intermediate cohort. Radiotherapy appeared to provide temporary improvement in pain score; however, recurrent pain led to surgery in 15%-20% of patients. Percutaneous vertebral augmentation provided improvement in pain. Minimally invasive surgery and open surgery offered improvement in pain, quality of life, neurological, and ambulatory outcomes. Open surgery may be associated with more complications. There was limited evidence for radiofrequency ablation.
In the SINS intermediate group, radiotherapy was associated with temporary improvement of pain but may require subsequent surgery. Both minimally invasive surgery and open spinal surgery achieved improvements in pain, quality of life, and neurological outcomes for patients with spine metastases. Open surgery may be associated with more complications.
系统评价。
在硬膜外转移性脊柱疾病患者中,我们试图系统评价脊髓不稳定肿瘤评分(SINS)为中度的病变患者接受放射治疗、经皮干预、微创手术或开放性脊柱手术的疗效及并发症。
按照系统评价的PRISMA指南,检索MEDLINE、EMBASE、科学网、Cochrane系统评价数据库和Cochrane对照试验中心注册库,查找报告SINS为中度且接受以下治疗的患者的研究:1)放射治疗,2)经皮干预,3)微创手术,或4)开放性手术。发表日期在2013年至2022年之间。排除SINS为低度或高度的患者。结局指标包括疼痛评分、功能状态、神经学结局、行走能力、生存率和围手术期并发症。
纳入39项研究(n = 4554),分析了SINS为中度队列的结局。放射治疗似乎能使疼痛评分得到暂时改善;然而,15%-20%的患者因复发性疼痛而接受手术。经皮椎体强化术可改善疼痛。微创手术和开放性手术可改善疼痛、生活质量、神经学及行走能力结局。开放性手术可能会伴随更多并发症。关于射频消融的证据有限。
在SINS为中度的组中,放射治疗与疼痛的暂时改善相关,但可能需要后续手术。微创手术和开放性脊柱手术均可改善脊柱转移患者的疼痛、生活质量和神经学结局。开放性手术可能会伴随更多并发症。