Characteristics of patients who survived 2 years after surgery for spinal metastases: Can we avoid inappropriate patient selection?

Publication date

2016-09-01

Authors

Verlaan, Jorrit-JanORCID 0000-0001-8105-6660ISNI 0000000392776086
Choi, David
Versteeg, Anne L.
Albert, Todd
Arts, Mark
Balabaud, Laurent
Bunger, Cody
Buchowski, Jacob Maciej
Chung, Chung Kee
Coppes, Maarten Hubert

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

Purpose Survival after metastatic cancer has improved at the cost of increased presentation with metastatic spinal disease. For patients with pathologic spinal fractures and/or spinal cord compression, surgical intervention may relieve pain and improve quality of life. Surgery is generally considered to be inappropriate if anticipated survival is , 3 months. The aim of this international multicenter study was to analyze data from patients who died within 3 months or 2 years after surgery, to identify preoperative factors associated with poor or good survival, and to avoid inappropriate selection of patients for surgery in the future. Patients and Methods A total of 1,266 patients underwent surgery for impending pathologic fractures and/or neurologic deficits and were prospectively observed. Data collected included tumor characteristics, preoperative fitness (American Society of Anesthesiologists advisory [ASA]), neurologic status (Frankel scale), performance (Karnofsky performance score [KPS]), and quality of life (EuroQol five-dimensions questionnaire [EQ-5D]). Outcomes were survival at 3 months and 2 years postsurgery. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses were used to find preoperative factors associated with short-term and long-term survival. Results In univariable analysis, age, emergency surgery, KPS, EQ-5D, ASA, Frankel, and Tokuhashi/Tomita scores were significantly associated with short survival. In multivariable analysis, KPS and age were significantly associated with short survival (odds ratio [OR], 1.36; 95% CI, 1.15 to 1.62; and OR, 1.14; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.27, respectively). Associated with longer survival in univariable analysis were age, number of levels included in surgery, KPS, EQ-5D, Frankel, and Tokuhashi/Tomita scores. In multivariable analysis, the number of levels included in surgery (OR, 1.21; 95% CI, 1.06 to 1.38) and primary tumor type were significantly associated with longer survival. Conclusion Poor performance status at presentation is the strongest indicator of poor short-term survival, whereas low disease load and favorable tumor histology are associated with longer-term survival.

Keywords

Taverne, General Medicine, Oncology, Cancer Research, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Observational Study

Citation

Verlaan, J J, Choi, D, Versteeg, A, Albert, T, Arts, M, Balabaud, L, Bunger, C, Buchowski, J M, Chung, C K, Coppes, M H, Crockard, H A, Depreitere, B, Fehlings, M G, Harrop, J, Kawahara, N, Kim, E S, Lee, C S, Leung, Y, Liu, Z, Martin-Benlloch, A, Massicotte, E M, Mazel, C, Meyer, B, Peul, W, Quraishi, N A, Tokuhashi, Y, Tomita, K, Ulbricht, C, Wang, M & Oner, F C 2016, 'Characteristics of patients who survived 2 years after surgery for spinal metastases : Can we avoid inappropriate patient selection?', Journal of Clinical Oncology, vol. 34, no. 25, pp. 3054-3061. https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO.2015.65.1497