Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB)

Standard

Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB). / Barz, Melanie; Aftahy, Kaywan; Janssen, Insa; Ryang, Yu-Mi; Prokop, Georg; Combs, Stephanie E; Jost, Philipp J; Meyer, Bernhard; Gempt, Jens.

In: CURR ONCOL, Vol. 28, No. 5, 02.10.2021, p. 3891-3899.

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

Harvard

Barz, M, Aftahy, K, Janssen, I, Ryang, Y-M, Prokop, G, Combs, SE, Jost, PJ, Meyer, B & Gempt, J 2021, 'Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB)', CURR ONCOL, vol. 28, no. 5, pp. 3891-3899. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28050332

APA

Barz, M., Aftahy, K., Janssen, I., Ryang, Y-M., Prokop, G., Combs, S. E., Jost, P. J., Meyer, B., & Gempt, J. (2021). Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB). CURR ONCOL, 28(5), 3891-3899. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28050332

Vancouver

Barz M, Aftahy K, Janssen I, Ryang Y-M, Prokop G, Combs SE et al. Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB). CURR ONCOL. 2021 Oct 2;28(5):3891-3899. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28050332

Bibtex

@article{af8d3cd9d0cc4a5da0a293877c776199,
title = "Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB)",
abstract = "Manifestation of malignant lymphoma in the spine is rare; there have only been a few cases reported in the literature. Due to its rarity, there is no gold standard for the management of patients suffering from spinal lymphoma manifestations. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the data for 37 patients (14 female, 23 male) with malignant lymphoma in the spine receiving intervention in our center from March 2006 until June 2020. Neurological impairment, pain, diagnostics, and/or surgical instability were the criteria for surgery in this patient cohort. Otherwise, only CT-guided biopsies were conducted. Analysis of the patient cohort was based on the Karnofsky performance status scale (KPSS), location of the lesion, spinal levels involved, spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS), surgical treatment, histopathological workup, adjuvant therapy, and overall survival. The following surgical procedures were performed: posterior stabilization and decompression in nine patients; decompression and/or tumor debulking in 18 patients; a two-staged procedure with dorsal stabilization and vertebral body replacement in four patients; decompression and biopsy in one patient; a two-stage procedure with kyphoplasty and posterior stabilization for one patient; posterior stabilization without decompression for one patient; a vertebroplasty and cement-augmented posterior stabilization for one patient; and a CT-guided biopsy alone for two patients. Twenty-one patients (56.78%) had ≥1 lesion in the thoracic spine, 10 patients (27.03%) had lesions in the lumbar spine, two patients had lesions in the cervicothoracic junction, two patients had lesions in the thoracolumbar junction, one patient had a lesion in the lumbosacral junction, and one patient had a lesion in the sacrum. The diagnoses of the histopathological workup were diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 23 (62.16%) cases, indolent lymphoma in 11 (29.74%) cases, anaplastic T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), and Burkitt lymphoma in one (2.70%) case. The median overall survival was 7.2 months (range 0.1-266.7 months). Pre- and postoperative KPSS scores were 70% (IQR 60-80%). Manifestation of malignant lymphomas in the spine is rare. Similar to the approach taken for spine metastases, a surgical intervention in cases of neurological impairment or manifest or potential instability is indicated, followed by chemoimmunotherapy and radiotherapy.",
keywords = "Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae, Lymphoma/diagnosis, Male, Retrospective Studies, Thoracic Vertebrae, Treatment Outcome",
author = "Melanie Barz and Kaywan Aftahy and Insa Janssen and Yu-Mi Ryang and Georg Prokop and Combs, {Stephanie E} and Jost, {Philipp J} and Bernhard Meyer and Jens Gempt",
year = "2021",
month = oct,
day = "2",
doi = "10.3390/curroncol28050332",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "3891--3899",
journal = "CURR ONCOL",
issn = "1198-0052",
publisher = "Multimed Inc.",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spinal Manifestation of Malignant Primary (PLB) and Secondary Bone Lymphoma (SLB)

AU - Barz, Melanie

AU - Aftahy, Kaywan

AU - Janssen, Insa

AU - Ryang, Yu-Mi

AU - Prokop, Georg

AU - Combs, Stephanie E

AU - Jost, Philipp J

AU - Meyer, Bernhard

AU - Gempt, Jens

PY - 2021/10/2

Y1 - 2021/10/2

N2 - Manifestation of malignant lymphoma in the spine is rare; there have only been a few cases reported in the literature. Due to its rarity, there is no gold standard for the management of patients suffering from spinal lymphoma manifestations. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the data for 37 patients (14 female, 23 male) with malignant lymphoma in the spine receiving intervention in our center from March 2006 until June 2020. Neurological impairment, pain, diagnostics, and/or surgical instability were the criteria for surgery in this patient cohort. Otherwise, only CT-guided biopsies were conducted. Analysis of the patient cohort was based on the Karnofsky performance status scale (KPSS), location of the lesion, spinal levels involved, spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS), surgical treatment, histopathological workup, adjuvant therapy, and overall survival. The following surgical procedures were performed: posterior stabilization and decompression in nine patients; decompression and/or tumor debulking in 18 patients; a two-staged procedure with dorsal stabilization and vertebral body replacement in four patients; decompression and biopsy in one patient; a two-stage procedure with kyphoplasty and posterior stabilization for one patient; posterior stabilization without decompression for one patient; a vertebroplasty and cement-augmented posterior stabilization for one patient; and a CT-guided biopsy alone for two patients. Twenty-one patients (56.78%) had ≥1 lesion in the thoracic spine, 10 patients (27.03%) had lesions in the lumbar spine, two patients had lesions in the cervicothoracic junction, two patients had lesions in the thoracolumbar junction, one patient had a lesion in the lumbosacral junction, and one patient had a lesion in the sacrum. The diagnoses of the histopathological workup were diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 23 (62.16%) cases, indolent lymphoma in 11 (29.74%) cases, anaplastic T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), and Burkitt lymphoma in one (2.70%) case. The median overall survival was 7.2 months (range 0.1-266.7 months). Pre- and postoperative KPSS scores were 70% (IQR 60-80%). Manifestation of malignant lymphomas in the spine is rare. Similar to the approach taken for spine metastases, a surgical intervention in cases of neurological impairment or manifest or potential instability is indicated, followed by chemoimmunotherapy and radiotherapy.

AB - Manifestation of malignant lymphoma in the spine is rare; there have only been a few cases reported in the literature. Due to its rarity, there is no gold standard for the management of patients suffering from spinal lymphoma manifestations. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the data for 37 patients (14 female, 23 male) with malignant lymphoma in the spine receiving intervention in our center from March 2006 until June 2020. Neurological impairment, pain, diagnostics, and/or surgical instability were the criteria for surgery in this patient cohort. Otherwise, only CT-guided biopsies were conducted. Analysis of the patient cohort was based on the Karnofsky performance status scale (KPSS), location of the lesion, spinal levels involved, spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS), surgical treatment, histopathological workup, adjuvant therapy, and overall survival. The following surgical procedures were performed: posterior stabilization and decompression in nine patients; decompression and/or tumor debulking in 18 patients; a two-staged procedure with dorsal stabilization and vertebral body replacement in four patients; decompression and biopsy in one patient; a two-stage procedure with kyphoplasty and posterior stabilization for one patient; posterior stabilization without decompression for one patient; a vertebroplasty and cement-augmented posterior stabilization for one patient; and a CT-guided biopsy alone for two patients. Twenty-one patients (56.78%) had ≥1 lesion in the thoracic spine, 10 patients (27.03%) had lesions in the lumbar spine, two patients had lesions in the cervicothoracic junction, two patients had lesions in the thoracolumbar junction, one patient had a lesion in the lumbosacral junction, and one patient had a lesion in the sacrum. The diagnoses of the histopathological workup were diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in 23 (62.16%) cases, indolent lymphoma in 11 (29.74%) cases, anaplastic T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), T-cell lymphoma in one case (2.70%), and Burkitt lymphoma in one (2.70%) case. The median overall survival was 7.2 months (range 0.1-266.7 months). Pre- and postoperative KPSS scores were 70% (IQR 60-80%). Manifestation of malignant lymphomas in the spine is rare. Similar to the approach taken for spine metastases, a surgical intervention in cases of neurological impairment or manifest or potential instability is indicated, followed by chemoimmunotherapy and radiotherapy.

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Lumbar Vertebrae

KW - Lymphoma/diagnosis

KW - Male

KW - Retrospective Studies

KW - Thoracic Vertebrae

KW - Treatment Outcome

U2 - 10.3390/curroncol28050332

DO - 10.3390/curroncol28050332

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 34677250

VL - 28

SP - 3891

EP - 3899

JO - CURR ONCOL

JF - CURR ONCOL

SN - 1198-0052

IS - 5

ER -