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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 5 - 5
1 Sep 2021
Raza M Sturt P Fragkakis A Ajayi B Lupu C Bishop T Bernard J Abdelhamid M Minhas P Lui D
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Introduction. Tomita En-bloc spondylectomy (TES) of L5 is one of the most challenging spinal surgical techniques. A 42-year-old female was referred with low back pain and L5 radiculopathy with background of right shoulder excision of liposarcoma. CT-PET confirmed a solitary L5 oligometastasis. MRI showed thecal sac indentation and therefore was not suitable for stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) alone. Planning Methodology. First Stage: Carbon fibre pedicle screws were planned from L2 to S2AI-Pelvis, aligned to her patient-specific rods. Custom 3D-printed navigation guides were used to overcome challenging limitations of carbon instruments. Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of L5 pedicles prior to osteotomy was performed to prevent sarcoma cell seeding. Microscope-assisted thecal sac-tumour separation and L5 nerve root dissection was performed. Novel surgical navigation of the ultrasonic bone cutter assisted inferior L4 and superior S1 endplate osteotomies. Second stage: We performed a vascular-assisted retroperitoneal approach to L4-S1 with protection of the great vessels. Completion of osteotomies at L4 and S1 to en-bloc L5: (L4 inferior endplate, L4/5 disc, L5 body, L5/S1 disc and S1 superior endplate). Anterior reconstruction used an expandable PEEK cage obviating the need for a third posterior stage. Reinforced with a patient-specific carbon plate L4-S1 promontory. Sacrifice of left L5 nerve root undertaken. Results. Patient rehabilitated well and was discharged after 42 days. Patient underwent SABR two months post-operatively. Despite left foot drop, she was walking independently 9 months post-operatively. Conclusion. These challenging cases require a truly multi-disciplinary team approach. We share this technique for a dual stage TES and metal-free construct with post adjuvant SABR for maximum local control


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 158 - 158
1 Apr 2012
Sharma H Reid R Reece A
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Sacro-coccygeal chordomas pose a difficult diagnostic and therapeutic problem due to late presentation, large size, soft-tisue extension, difficulties in obtaining adequate resection margins, higher local recurrence rate and uncertain effectiveness of adjuvant treatment. We present a series of 21 patients of sacral chordomas obtained from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry to analyse predictors of local control and survival. The clinical and morphologic features, type of treatment and follow-up of 21 consecutive patients with sacral chordoma were retrospectively reviewed and analysed. The data were obtained from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry. The average age at time of the biopsy was 59 years (range, 12 to 82 years): twelve patients were male and nine were female. Pain was the presenting symptom in all patients. Two had intralesional (both recurred), 9 marginal (4 recurred) and 3 wide resections (1 recurred). Fifteen of the twenty-one patients were treated with adjuvant radiation therapy. In seven patients, the chordoma was inoperable and all but one were treated with adjuvant radiotherapy. Local recurrence and metastases occurred in 7 (50%) and 5 (23.8%) patients. The 5-year and 10-year survival were 38% and 14.2%, respectively. Excision of the lesion combined with adjuvant radiation therapy provided satisfactory results. Local recurrence presents a major problem in the management of sacral chordomas (50%). Intralesional resection should be avoided as it is associated with 100% local recurrence in our series


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_11 | Pages 17 - 17
1 Sep 2021
Sivasubramaniam V Fragkakis A Ho P Fenner C Ajayi B Crocker MJ Minhas P Lupu C Bishop T Bernard J Lui DF
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Introduction. Treatment of spinal metastatic disease has evolved with the advent of advanced interventional, surgical and radiation techniques. Spinal Oligometastatic disease is a low volume disease state where en bloc resection of the tumour, based on oncological principles, can achieve maximum local control (MLC). Hybrid therapy incorporating Separation surgery (>2mm clearance of the thecal sac) and Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy (SABR) offer an alternative approach to achieving MLC. Hybrid therapy is also a viable option in patients eligible for SBRT who have failed conventional radiation therapy. En-bloc surgery may be a suitable option for those patients who are ineligible for or have failed SBRT. A multidisciplinary approach is particularly important in the decision-making process for these patients. Metal free instrumentation is aiding the optimization of these surgeries. The authors present a supra-regional centre's experience in managing spinal oligometastases. Methods. Retrospective review of oligometastatic spinal disease at a supra-regional centre between 2017 and 2021. Demographics, operative course, complications and Instrument type are examined. Results. Demographics: 24 patients with mean age 53.8y (range 12–77), 44% (40y–59y), 40% (60y–69y); 51% Male. Histology: Breast, Renal and Sarcoma accounted for 16.7% each; Thyroid, Prostate and Chordoma accounted for 8.3% each. Primary disease 7%, Synchronous 15%, Metachronous 78%. Instrumentation: Carbon-fibre (85%), TiAl (11%), Non-Instrumented (3%). Separation Surgery (70%), En-bloc resection/Tomita surgery (30%); SABR/Proton Beam Planned: 70%. Average length of hospital stays 19.1 days; twenty patients required intensive care admission for an average 2.7 days. 30 Day Mortality 8.3% (n=2: COVID-19 during admission and ventriculitis post discharge), 1y Mortality – 16.7%, 3y Mortality – 25%; Synchronous Mortality 75% (n=3) at 3 years. 30 Day infection rate 3%; 1y infection rate 7%. 1 Non-instrumented case developed proximal junctional failure post proton beam therapy and required a vascularised fibular strut graft. 2-year Revision for Local Recurrence 5% (Revision at 23 months). Conclusion. There are very few case series of oligometastatic spinal disease due to the relatively new concept of adjuvant SABR and its limited availability. Solid tumours pre-dominated the histology in our series with metachronous disease being the most commonly operated disease state. 92% of cases were eligible for SABR. The majority (85%) of cases were performed with Carbon-fibre instrumentation and has been shown to be safe with no mechanical failures in this series. Infection rates are in keeping with patients requiring radical radiotherapy with 3% early and 7% late. 30-day mortality was 8.3%, 1y=16.7% and 25% at last follow up. Mortality, as expected, is highest within the synchronous disease group and should be operated on sparingly. With the current management strategy, there was no local recurrence at 1 year and excellent local recurrence rate at 2 years (5%). Although radical en bloc surgery carries significant morbidity, it should be considered in selective cases to achieve MLC. All Oligometastatic cases deserve extra consideration and specialist MDT as not all are suitable for SABR. Multimodal Hybrid therapy, incorporating less invasive surgical techniques and SABR, represents a paradigm shift in achieving MLC in oligometastatic spinal disease


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXVI | Pages 16 - 16
1 Jun 2012
Sharma H Lim J Reid R Reece AT
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Introduction. Spinal osteosarcomas are quite rare and the optimal treatment strategy is unknown. We report a series of 9 cases of osteosarcoma of the spine treated with intralesional resection and adjuvant combination therapy in order to evaluate their clinico-pathological correlation, recurrence rate and survival. Materials and Methods. Between 1980 and 2009, nine histologically confirmed cases of primary conventional osteogenic sarcoma of the spine were identified from Scottish Bone Tumour Registry. This prospectively collected registry database was retrospectively reviewed. Results. There were 9 cases with male predominance (77.7%) at a median age of 39 years (range, 16 – 73 years) and were anatomically distributed as 2-cervical, 6-thoracic, 1-lumbar and 1-sacral. Local and distant staging and histological grading was carried out in all. Seven patients underwent intralesional (including open biopsies) and 2 marginal resections. Seven patients received adjuvant chemotherapy and 8 adjuvant radiotherapy. The overall local recurrence rate was 66.6%. All but one patient died of the disease with a median length of survival of 30 months. The 2-year and 5-year survival rates were 66.6% and 22.2% respectively. Two patients who survived more than 5 years were male patients below the age of 40 years involving thoracic spine (one had a marginal resection without receiving any adjuvant therapy subsequently had a recurrence; other one underwent intralesional resection with adjuvant chemo- and radiotherapy, died with no evidence of disease). Conclusions. Spinal osteosarcoma in Scottish patients showed a higher median age, thoracic spine and male gender predilection with overall poor prognosis. Local recurrence did not affect the survival adversely, however patients older than 40 years and metastases at presentation showed poor survival compared to age under 40 and non-metastatic presentations


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 159 - 159
1 Apr 2012
Sharma H Reid R Reece A
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Chordomas are slowly growing, locally aggressive primary malignant neoplasms derived from primitive notochordal cells. They tend to occur at the extreme of ages and at the two ends of the spinal column. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the presentation, morphology and behaviour of 20 non-clival, non-sacral chordoma cases. Details of 20 cases of histologically confirmed Chordomas of the mobile spine (Cervical-7, Thoracic-7, Lumbar-6) between 1967 and 2006, were extracted from the Scottish Bone Tumour Registry. The casenotes and radiographs were retrospectively reviewed. Non-sacral chordomas comprised 48.7% (20/41 cases) of total chordomas registered. There was a slight feminine predominance (11/20 cases). Mean age was 58.1 years (range, 12 to 82 years). Progressively worsening back pain was the first symptom in all the patients. Seven had intra-lesional (five recurred), six marginal (1 recurred) and 2 wide resections (none recurred). Eleven of the twenty-one patients were treated with adjuvant radiation therapy. In five patients, the chordoma was inoperable and all but one were treated with radiotherapy. There were 2 recurrences in the group of patients treated without adjuvant radiotherapy. Six patients (40%) developed local recurrences and 3 patients (15%) developed metastases. There were 4 survivors including one with local recurrence. Sixteen patients died including 3 with metastases, 7 with persistent primary disease, 1 with local recurrence and 5 with no evidence of disease or died of unrelated causes. Median survival was 19 months (mean-30.2 months), with 5- and 10-year survival rates 10% and 0.0% respectively. We found that non-sacral/non-clival chordomas had a much poorer prognosis than published in the literature. Local recurrences occurred in 40%. Intra-lesional resection should be avoided as it is associated with 71.4% local recurrence in our series


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 105-B, Issue 2 | Pages 172 - 179
1 Feb 2023
Shimizu T Kato S Demura S Shinmura K Yokogawa N Kurokawa Y Yoshioka K Murakami H Kawahara N Tsuchiya H

Aims

The aim of this study was to investigate the incidence and characteristics of instrumentation failure (IF) after total en bloc spondylectomy (TES), and to analyze risk factors for IF.

Methods

The medical records from 136 patients (65 male, 71 female) with a mean age of 52.7 years (14 to 80) who underwent TES were retrospectively reviewed. The mean follow-up period was 101 months (36 to 232). Analyzed factors included incidence of IF, age, sex, BMI, history of chemotherapy or radiotherapy, tumour histology (primary or metastasis; benign or malignant), surgical approach (posterior or combined), tumour location (thoracic or lumbar; junctional or non-junctional), number of resected vertebrae (single or multilevel), anterior resection line (disc-to-disc or intravertebra), type of bone graft (autograft or frozen autograft), cage subsidence (CS), and local alignment (LA). A survival analysis of the instrumentation was performed, and relationships between IF and other factors were investigated using the Cox regression model.


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 5 | Pages 348 - 358
1 May 2022
Stokes S Drozda M Lee C

This review provides a concise outline of the advances made in the care of patients and to the quality of life after a traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) over the last century. Despite these improvements reversal of the neurological injury is not yet possible. Instead, current treatment is limited to providing symptomatic relief, avoiding secondary insults and preventing additional sequelae. However, with an ever-advancing technology and deeper understanding of the damaged spinal cord, this appears increasingly conceivable. A brief synopsis of the most prominent challenges facing both clinicians and research scientists in developing functional treatments for a progressively complex injury are presented. Moreover, the multiple mechanisms by which damage propagates many months after the original injury requires a multifaceted approach to ameliorate the human spinal cord. We discuss potential methods to protect the spinal cord from damage, and to manipulate the inherent inhibition of the spinal cord to regeneration and repair. Although acute and chronic SCI share common final pathways resulting in cell death and neurological deficits, the underlying putative mechanisms of chronic SCI and the treatments are not covered in this review.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 89-B, Issue 3 | Pages 342 - 345
1 Mar 2007
Vaidya R Weir R Sethi A Meisterling S Hakeos W Wybo CD

We carried out a prospective study to determine whether the addition of a recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein (rhBMP-2) to a machined allograft spacer would improve the rate of intervertebral body fusion in the spine. We studied 77 patients who were to undergo an interbody fusion with allograft and instrumentation. The first 36 patients received allograft with adjuvant rhBMP-2 (allograft/rhBMP-2 group), and the next 41, allograft and demineralised bone matrix (allograft/demineralised bone matrix group). Each patient was assessed clinically and radiologically both pre-operatively and at each follow-up visit using standard methods. Follow-up continued for two years. Every patient in the allograft/rhBMP-2 group had fused by six months. However, early graft lucency and significant (> 10%) subsidence were seen radiologically in 27 of 55 levels in this group. The mean graft height subsidence was 27% (13% to 42%) for anterior lumbar interbody fusion, 24% (13% to 40%) for transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion, and 53% (40% to 58%) for anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. Those who had undergone fusion using allograft and demineralised bone matrix lost only a mean of 4.6% (0% to 15%) of their graft height. Although a high rate of fusion (100%) was achieved with rhBMP-2, significant subsidence occurred in more than half of the levels (23 of 37) in the lumbar spine and 33% (6 of 18) in the cervical spine. A 98% fusion rate (62 of 63 levels) was achieved without rhBMP-2 and without the associated graft subsidence. Consequently, we no longer use rhBMP-2 with allograft in our practice if the allograft has to provide significant structural support


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 96-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 37 - 37
1 Feb 2014
Dunderdale C Jones F Billington J Khatri M
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Introduction. Spinal conditions commonly cause pain and disability. Various non-operative treatments including acupuncture are practiced for these conditions. Aim. To evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture in management of common spinal conditions. Methodology. Between Jan 2011 and Feb 2013, 151 patients who received manual acupuncture in a hospital environment were assessed for pain improvement on Numerical-rating- scale (NRS) of 0–10, overall improvement with Core Outcome Measure Index (COMI) and for satisfaction with the care. Results. 110 had low back pain with and or radicular symptoms, 33 had neck pain and or radicular symptoms, 05 had thoracic and 04 multilevel symptoms. Average number of session given were 3.98 (range 2 to 8). Minimum and maximum reported pain improved statistically from 4.17 to 2.94 (Df 1.2, p = 0.00) and 8.00 to 6.03 (Df 1.9, p = 0.00) respectively but were below Minimum Clinically Important Difference (MCID) of 2. COMI improved statistically from 6.39(SD1.6) to 5.37 (SD 1.9) (Df 1.02, p = 0.00) that was below group MCID of COMI of 2.6. Seventy-five required further treatment, 49 were discharged and 11 patient did not complete the treatment. Discussion. Acupuncture is an NICE recommended established adjuvant treatment for treating common spinal conditions. This study demonstrates it to a be a safe technique with high patient satisfaction with statistically significant improvement in outcome measures that are below MCID of improvement raising questions on its cost effectiveness in routine clinical practice


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 103-B, Issue 5 | Pages 976 - 983
3 May 2021
Demura S Kato S Shinmura K Yokogawa N Shimizu T Handa M Annen R Kobayashi M Yamada Y Murakami H Kawahara N Tomita K Tsuchiya H

Aims

To evaluate the perioperative complications associated with total en bloc spondylectomy (TES) in patients with spinal tumours, based on the extent and level of tumour resection.

Methods

In total, 307 patients who underwent TES in a single centre were reviewed retrospectively. There were 164 male and 143 female patients with a mean age at the time of surgery of 52.9 years (SD 13.3). A total of 225 patients were operated on for spinal metastases, 34 for a malignant primary tumour, 41 for an aggressive benign tumour, and seven with a primary of unknown origin. The main lesion was located in the thoracic spine in 213, and in the lumbar spine in 94 patients. There were 97 patients who underwent TES for more than two consecutive vertebrae.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 100 - 106
1 Jan 2003
Sundararaj GD Behera S Ravi V Venkatesh K Cherian VM Lee V

We present a prospective study of patients with tuberculosis of the dorsal, dorsolumbar and lumbar spine after combined anterior (radical debridement and anterior fusion) and posterior (instrumentation and fusion) surgery. The object was to study the progress of interbody union, the extent of correction of the kyphosis and its maintenance with early mobilisation, and the incidence of graft and implant-related problems. The American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) score was used to assess the neurological status. The mean preoperative vertebral loss was highest (0.96) in the dorsal spine. The maximum correction of the kyphosis in the dorsolumbar spine was 17.8°. Loss of correction was maximal in the lumbosacral spine at 13.7°. All patients had firm anterior fusion at a mean of five months. The incidence of infection was 3.9% and of graft-related problems 6.5%. We conclude that adjuvant posterior stabilisation allows early mobilisation and rehabilitation. Graft-related problems were fewer and the progression and maintenance of correction of the kyphosis were better than with anterior surgery alone. There is no additional risk relating to the use of an implant either posteriorly or anteriorly even when large quantities of pus are present


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1379 - 1384
1 Oct 2019
Park J Park S Lee C

Aims

This study aimed to evaluate the incidence and prognosis of patients with spinal metastasis as the initial manifestation of malignancy (SM-IMM).

Patients and Methods

We retrospectively reviewed the electronic medical records of 338 patients who underwent surgical treatment for metastatic spinal disease. The enrolled patients were divided into two groups. The SM-IMM group included patients with no history of malignancy whose site of primary malignancy was diagnosed after the identification of spinal metastasis. The other group included patients with a history of treatment for primary malignancy who then developed spinal metastasis (SM-DTM). The incidence of SM-IMM by site of primary malignancy was calculated. The difference between prognoses after surgical treatment for SM-IMM and SM-DTM was established.