Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making

Standard

Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making. / Mohme, Malte; Mende, Christian; Krätzig, Theresa; Plätke, Rosemarie; Beseoglu, Kerim; Hagedorn, Julian; Steiger, Hans-Jakob; Floeth, Frank W; Eicker, Sven O.

In: NEUROSURG REV, Vol. 40, No. 3, 04.04.2017, p. 377-387.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mohme, M, Mende, C, Krätzig, T, Plätke, R, Beseoglu, K, Hagedorn, J, Steiger, H-J, Floeth, FW & Eicker, SO 2017, 'Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making', NEUROSURG REV, vol. 40, no. 3, pp. 377-387. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-016-0790-z

APA

Mohme, M., Mende, C., Krätzig, T., Plätke, R., Beseoglu, K., Hagedorn, J., Steiger, H-J., Floeth, F. W., & Eicker, S. O. (2017). Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making. NEUROSURG REV, 40(3), 377-387. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10143-016-0790-z

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{39f4f24539614088a215d6711ca9170b,
title = "Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making",
abstract = "Spinal cord or cauda equina compression (SCC) is an increasing challenge in clinical oncology due to a higher prevalence of long-term cancer survivors. Our aim was to determine the clinical relevance of SCC regarding patient outcome depending on different tumor entities and their anatomical localization (extradural/intradural/intramedullary). We retrospectively analyzed 230 patients surgically treated for SCC. Preoperative status for pain and neurological impairment were correlated to the degree of compression, tumor location, and early as well as short-term follow-up outcome parameters. Interestingly, we did not observe any differences between intradural-extramedullary compared to extradural tumors. Unilaterally localized tumors were likely to present with pain (72.9 %, p < 0.01), whereas concentric growth was associated with motor deficits (41.0 %, p < 0.01, as primary symptom, 49.3 % on admission, p < 0.05). In concentric tumors, the pain pattern was diffuse (40.5 % vs. 17.5 in unilateral disease, p < 0.01), whereas unilateral tumors resulted in localized pain (61.4 % local axial or radicular, p < 0.01). Diffuse pain, patients without a sensory or motor deficit, progressive disease, cervical localization, and a higher degree of stenosis were identified as beneficial for an early improvement in pain (p < 0.05). Notably, 29 % of patients with unchanged pain and 30.8 % with unchanged neurologic function at day 7 postoperative improved during follow-up (p < 0.001). Our data demonstrate that the preoperative tumor anatomy in patients with SCC was closely related to their presenting symptoms and early clinical outcome. The detailed analysis elucidates the biology of SCC and might thereby aid in determining which patients will benefit from surgery.",
author = "Malte Mohme and Christian Mende and Theresa Kr{\"a}tzig and Rosemarie Pl{\"a}tke and Kerim Beseoglu and Julian Hagedorn and Hans-Jakob Steiger and Floeth, {Frank W} and Eicker, {Sven O}",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1007/s10143-016-0790-z",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "377--387",
journal = "NEUROSURG REV",
issn = "0344-5607",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of spinal cord compression from intradural and epidural spinal tumors on perioperative symptoms-implications for surgical decision making

AU - Mohme, Malte

AU - Mende, Christian

AU - Krätzig, Theresa

AU - Plätke, Rosemarie

AU - Beseoglu, Kerim

AU - Hagedorn, Julian

AU - Steiger, Hans-Jakob

AU - Floeth, Frank W

AU - Eicker, Sven O

PY - 2017/4/4

Y1 - 2017/4/4

N2 - Spinal cord or cauda equina compression (SCC) is an increasing challenge in clinical oncology due to a higher prevalence of long-term cancer survivors. Our aim was to determine the clinical relevance of SCC regarding patient outcome depending on different tumor entities and their anatomical localization (extradural/intradural/intramedullary). We retrospectively analyzed 230 patients surgically treated for SCC. Preoperative status for pain and neurological impairment were correlated to the degree of compression, tumor location, and early as well as short-term follow-up outcome parameters. Interestingly, we did not observe any differences between intradural-extramedullary compared to extradural tumors. Unilaterally localized tumors were likely to present with pain (72.9 %, p < 0.01), whereas concentric growth was associated with motor deficits (41.0 %, p < 0.01, as primary symptom, 49.3 % on admission, p < 0.05). In concentric tumors, the pain pattern was diffuse (40.5 % vs. 17.5 in unilateral disease, p < 0.01), whereas unilateral tumors resulted in localized pain (61.4 % local axial or radicular, p < 0.01). Diffuse pain, patients without a sensory or motor deficit, progressive disease, cervical localization, and a higher degree of stenosis were identified as beneficial for an early improvement in pain (p < 0.05). Notably, 29 % of patients with unchanged pain and 30.8 % with unchanged neurologic function at day 7 postoperative improved during follow-up (p < 0.001). Our data demonstrate that the preoperative tumor anatomy in patients with SCC was closely related to their presenting symptoms and early clinical outcome. The detailed analysis elucidates the biology of SCC and might thereby aid in determining which patients will benefit from surgery.

AB - Spinal cord or cauda equina compression (SCC) is an increasing challenge in clinical oncology due to a higher prevalence of long-term cancer survivors. Our aim was to determine the clinical relevance of SCC regarding patient outcome depending on different tumor entities and their anatomical localization (extradural/intradural/intramedullary). We retrospectively analyzed 230 patients surgically treated for SCC. Preoperative status for pain and neurological impairment were correlated to the degree of compression, tumor location, and early as well as short-term follow-up outcome parameters. Interestingly, we did not observe any differences between intradural-extramedullary compared to extradural tumors. Unilaterally localized tumors were likely to present with pain (72.9 %, p < 0.01), whereas concentric growth was associated with motor deficits (41.0 %, p < 0.01, as primary symptom, 49.3 % on admission, p < 0.05). In concentric tumors, the pain pattern was diffuse (40.5 % vs. 17.5 in unilateral disease, p < 0.01), whereas unilateral tumors resulted in localized pain (61.4 % local axial or radicular, p < 0.01). Diffuse pain, patients without a sensory or motor deficit, progressive disease, cervical localization, and a higher degree of stenosis were identified as beneficial for an early improvement in pain (p < 0.05). Notably, 29 % of patients with unchanged pain and 30.8 % with unchanged neurologic function at day 7 postoperative improved during follow-up (p < 0.001). Our data demonstrate that the preoperative tumor anatomy in patients with SCC was closely related to their presenting symptoms and early clinical outcome. The detailed analysis elucidates the biology of SCC and might thereby aid in determining which patients will benefit from surgery.

U2 - 10.1007/s10143-016-0790-z

DO - 10.1007/s10143-016-0790-z

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 27714480

VL - 40

SP - 377

EP - 387

JO - NEUROSURG REV

JF - NEUROSURG REV

SN - 0344-5607

IS - 3

ER -