Evolution in Treatment Strategy for Metastatic Spine Disease: Presently Evolving Modalities

Publication date: Available online 17 May 2017 Source:European Journal of Surgical Oncology (EJSO) Author(s): Naresh Kumar, Rishi Malhotra, Aye Sandar Zaw, Karthikeyan Maharajan, Nandika Naresh, Aravind Kumar, Balamurugan Vallayappan The advent of minimally invasive surgery (MIS) in surgical management armamentarium and stereotactic radiosurgery in the domain of radiotherapy, has led to a major evolution in treatment of metastatic spine disease (MSD). We reviewed the recent literature to discuss evolution from open to MIS approaches in MSD and the concurrent evolution in radiotherapy. This will provide a sound base to further development and understanding of treatment paradigms in MSD. Literature review showed that evolution of surgery can be traced from inappropriate open surgery (i.e. laminectomy) to appropriate open (i.e. posterior instrumentation and decompression) and further to minimally invasive surgery. This transition was interspersed with the introduction of radiotherapy and its evolution in management of MSD. Evidence shows that presently, the best clinical outcomes are achieved by surgery with timely postoperative radiotherapy. To make surgery an appealing choice in MSD, surgical morbidity needs to be minimized, when planning postoperative oncological treatment. MIS approaches are encouraging due to early wound healing resulting in early introduction of radiotherapy, reduced intraoperative blood loss and shortened hospital stay. Pain reduction and neurolo...
Source: European Journal of Surgical Oncology (EJSO) - Category: Surgery Source Type: research