AO Spine Clinical Practice Recommendations: Reducing the Surgical Footprint of Surgery for Spinal Metastases

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Alvaro Silva González - , Faculty of Medicine, Clínica Alemana Universidad del Desarrollo Roberto del Rio, Santiago, Chile. (Author)
  • Hanbo Chen - , Sunnybrook Health Science Centre (Author)
  • Alexander C Disch - , University Center for Orthopedics, Trauma and Plastic Surgery, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus Dresden (Author)
  • Jeremy Kam - , Monash Health (Author)
  • John E O'Toole - , Rush University Medical Center (Author)
  • Nicolas Dea - , University of British Columbia (Author)
  • Alessandro Gasbarrini - , IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli - Bologna (Author)
  • Ilya Laufer - , New York University Langone Health (Author)
  • Cordula Netzer - , University Hospital Basel (Author)
  • Jeremy Reynolds - , Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (Author)
  • Laurence D Rhines - , University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center (Author)
  • Arjun Sahgal - , Sunnybrook Health Science Centre (Author)
  • Jorrit-Jan Verlaan - , University Medical Center (UMC) Utrecht (Author)
  • Charles G Fisher - , University of British Columbia (Author)
  • Ori Barzilai - , Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (Author)

Abstract

Study DesignLiterature review with clinical recommendations.ObjectiveSpinal metastases represent a late complication of cancer and a major factor in decreased quality of life. The role of surgery for specific indications for spinal metastases is well established. Given the significant morbidity associated with spine surgery in this frail population, efforts are ongoing to decrease the surgical footprint. The objective of this study is to provide the readers with a concise curation of the latest spine literature on reducing the surgical footprint for spine metastases and clinical recommendations for how the practicing clinician should interpret and make use of this evidence.MethodsThe latest spine literature in the topic of reducing the surgical footprint for spine metastases was reviewed and clinical recommendations were formulated. The recommendations are dichotomously graded into strong and conditional based on the integration of scientific methodology and content expert opinion. This opinion considers experience and practical issues such as risks, burdens, costs, patient values, and circumstances.ResultsFour high impact studies were selected for review. The findings suggest that surgery plays a key role in improving patients' quality of life, but incidence of adverse events remains high and hence methods to decrease surgical morbidity are necessary. The integration of radiation into the treatment algorithm allows for less extensive surgical procedures and SBRT should be strongly considered after surgery for spine metastases in appropriate patient populations. Implementation of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols reduce perioperative morbidity for both open and minimally invasive surgeries and should be considered on an institutional level. Utilization of minimally invasive surgical stabilization should be considered as it results in fewer post operative complications, lower infection rates, less blood loss during surgery, and a shorter hospital stay compared to open stabilization of unstable pathology thoracolumbar fractures.ConclusionsThe role and benefits of surgery for metastatic spine disease are well established, yet surgery carries significant risk for adverse events which may negatively affect overall cancer care. Methods for reducing the surgical footprint include incorporation of stereotactic radiation allowing less extensive surgery, implementation of ERAS protocols and utilization of minimally invasive surgical strategies.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number21925682251352442
Pages (from-to)21925682251352442
JournalGlobal spine journal
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 16 Jun 2025
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMedCentral PMC12170550
Scopus 105009687648

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals