The Role and Clinical Outcomes of Endoscopic Spine Surgery of Treating Spinal Metastases, Outcomes of 29 Cases From 8 Countries

Primer Autor
Kim, Jung-Hoon
Co-autores
Suvithayasiri, Siravich
Kim, Young-Jin
Liu, Yanting
Trathitephun, Warayos
Asawasaksakul, Akarawit
Quillo-Olvera, Javier
Kotheeranurak, Vit
Chagas, Haroldo
Valencia, Cristian Correa
Serra, Marcus Vinicius
Van Isseldyk, Facundo
Lee, Lung-Hsing
Chen, Chien-Min
Lokhande, Pramod
Park, Sang-Min
Jitpakdee, Khanathip
Patel, Kandarpkumar K.
Mahatthanatrakul, Akaworn
Luksanapruksa, Panya
Wilartratsami, Sirichai
Kim, Jin-Sung
Título
The Role and Clinical Outcomes of Endoscopic Spine Surgery of Treating Spinal Metastases, Outcomes of 29 Cases From 8 Countries
Editorial
KOREAN SPINAL NEUROSURGERY SOC
Revista
NEUROSPINE
Lenguaje
en
Resumen
Objective: We aim to report the outcomes and feasibility of endoscopic spine surgery used to treat symptomatic spinal metastases patients. This is the most extensive series of spinal metastases patients who underwent endoscopic spine surgery. Methods: A worldwide collaborative network group of endoscopic spine surgeons, named 'ESSSORG,' was established. Patients diagnosed with spinal metastases who underwent en-doscopic spine surgery from 2012 to 2022 were retrospectively reviewed. All related patient data and clinical outcomes were gathered and analyzed before the surgery and the follow-time period of 2 weeks, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months. Results: A total of 29 patients from South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan, Mexico, Brazil, Ar-gentina, Chile, and India, were included. The mean age was 59.59 years, and 11 of them were female. The total number of decompressed levels was 40. The technique was relatively equal (15 uniportal, 14 biportal). The average length of admission was 4.41 days. Of all pa-tients with an American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale of D or lower before surgery, 62.06% reported having at least one recovery grade after the surgery. Almost all clinical outcomes parameters statistically significantly improved and maintained from 2 weeks to 6 months after the surgery. Few surgical-related complications (4 cases) were reported. Conclusion: Endoscopic spine surgery is a valid option for treating spinal metastases pa-tients as it could yield comparable results to other minimally invasive spine surgery tech-niques. As the aim is to improve the quality of life, this procedure is valuable and holds val-ue in palliative oncologic spine surgery.
Fecha Publicación
2023
Tipo de Recurso
artículo original
doi
10.14245/ns.2346274.137
Formato Recurso
PDF
Palabras Claves
Endoscopic spine surgery
Spinal metastases
Minimally invasive spine surgery
Palliative surgery
Quality of life
Ubicación del archivo
Categoría OCDE
Neurociencias y Neurología
Cirugía
Materias
Cirugía endoscópica de columna
Metástasis espinales
Cirugía de columna mínimamente invasiva
Cirugía paliativa
Calidad de vida
Página de inicio (Recomendado-único)
608.0
Página final (Recomendado-único)
+
Identificador del recurso (Mandatado-único)
artículo original
Versión del recurso (Recomendado-único)
versión publicada
License
CC BY NC 4.0
Condición de la licencia (Recomendado-repetible)
CC BY NC 4.0
Derechos de acceso
acceso abierto
Access Rights
acceso abierto
Id de Web of Science
WOS:001025932600022
ISSN
2586-6583
Tipo de ruta
verde# dorado
Categoría WOS
Neurociencias y Neurología
Cirugía
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