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. 1995 Sep;13(9):2330-5.
doi: 10.1200/JCO.1995.13.9.2330.

Surgical treatment of spinal cord compression from epidural metastasis

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Surgical treatment of spinal cord compression from epidural metastasis

N Sundaresan et al. J Clin Oncol. 1995 Sep.

Abstract

Purpose: A retrospective study of the results of neoplastic cord compression was undertaken to determine the effectiveness of surgical treatment and to assess quality of life in patients undergoing extensive procedures with potential morbidity.

Patients and methods: Over a 5-year period (1989 to 1993), a total of 110 patients underwent surgery. Fifty-five patients (50%) had undergone prior treatment, including 47 (43%) who had failed to respond to prior irradiation (RT). Before surgery, 48 patients (44%) were nonambulatory, with severe paresis being present in 20. Surgery included staged anterior-posterior resections in 53 patients (48%), anterior resections in 33 (30%), and posterior resection in six (5%), all of whom required spinal instrumentation for reconstruction; only 18 patients underwent resection without instrumentation.

Results: Postoperatively, 90 patients (82%) were improved, both in terms of pain relief and ambulatory status. Fifty-three patients (48%) experienced postoperative complications, related statistically to the following three factors: age over 65 years, prior treatment, and presence of paraparesis. The overall median survival duration was 16 months, with 46% alive at 2 years. Apart from primary tumor, the presence of preoperative paraparesis had the most significant impact on survival.

Conclusion: Our data suggest that the effective surgical treatment of neoplastic compression requires anterior-posterior resection in most patients to achieve the goal of total tumor resection, with the majority requiring instrumentation. Long-term survival is feasible in a subset of patients with this aggressive surgical approach.

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