Cervical spine chordomas: surgical outcome assessment in a multicenter cohort from the Primary Tumor Research and Outcomes Network

Publication date

2026-04

Authors

Zaldivar-Jolissaint, Julien F
Chu Kwan, William
Fisher, Charles G
Rhines, Laurence D
Boriani, Stefano
Gasbarrini, Alessandro
Luzzati, Alessandro
Wei, Feng
Gokaslan, Ziya L
Bettegowda, Chetan

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Chordomas are rare, locally aggressive primary neoplasms. Resection with negative margins is the primary recommended therapeutic approach, while adjuvant radiotherapy and chemotherapy can also play a role in their treatment in certain situations, including lesions with positive margins or those that are poorly differentiated or dedifferentiated. Cervical spine chordomas pose significant surgical challenges given their proximity to critical anatomical structures and the mechanical constraints of the cervical spine. In the current case series, authors aimed to explore the clinical and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) of the surgical treatment of cervical chordomas in a large multicenter cohort. METHODS: This multicenter case series analysis utilized data from the prospectively collected Primary Tumor Research and Outcomes Network (PTRON) registry, from its inception (May 16, 2016) to data extraction (February 29, 2024). The study population was restricted to patients with histologically confirmed cervical chordomas involving levels C0-7, who underwent surgical treatment at one of the participating centers, and for whom both the initially planned and postoperatively pathologically confirmed surgical margins were documented. Patient demographics, tumor characteristics, surgical and adjuvant treatments, local recurrence-free survival (LRFS), overall survival (OS), and perioperative adverse events were retrieved. PROs included the Spine Oncology Study Group Outcomes Questionnaire version 2.0 (SOSGOQ2.0), EQ-5D, and SF-36 version 2.0 (SF-36v2). RESULTS: Thirty-eight patients were identified, 12 of whom underwent true en bloc resection (EBR), 18 of whom underwent deliberate intralesional resection, and 8 of whom underwent EBR after intralesional surgery or in whom EBR failed. True EBR led to better LRFS (92% vs 83% vs 63%, respectively) and OS (83% vs 39% vs 50%, respectively). Surgical adverse events within 1 year were more frequent with true EBR (100% vs 39% vs 75%, respectively). EQ-5D, SOSGOQ2.0, and SF-36v2 showed improvement with true EBR, whereas the trends for PROs from the other groups were more variable. CONCLUSIONS: This multicenter case series analysis provides critical insights into the clinical outcomes and PROs in the largest cohort of surgically treated cervical spine chordomas described to date. It underscores the importance and challenges of wide resection for oncological control. It establishes the associated morbidity and provides an overview of PROs following surgery. These findings contribute valuable evidence to inform shared decision-making and optimize patient care.

Keywords

cervical, chordoma, oncology, patient-reported outcome, tumor, Surgery, Neurology, Clinical Neurology

Citation

Zaldivar-Jolissaint, J F, Chu Kwan, W, Fisher, C G, Rhines, L D, Boriani, S, Gasbarrini, A, Luzzati, A, Wei, F, Gokaslan, Z L, Bettegowda, C, Sciubba, D M, Lazary, A, Kawahara, N, Clarke, M J, Barzilai, O, Rampersaud, Y R, Disch, A C, Chou, D, Shin, J H, Hornicek, F J, Laufer, I, Sahgal, A, Verlaan, J-J, Reynolds, J & Dea, N 2026, 'Cervical spine chordomas : surgical outcome assessment in a multicenter cohort from the Primary Tumor Research and Outcomes Network', Journal of neurosurgery. Spine, vol. 44, no. 4, pp. 607-617. https://doi.org/10.3171/2025.9.SPINE25785