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Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer... May 2024The current research compared radiobiological and dosimetric results for simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) plans employing RapidArc and IMRT planning procedures in...
Assessment of the Dosimetric Index from IMRT and Rapid arc Plan for Oropharyngeal Cancer with Simultaneous Integrated Boost (SIB) Technique in Combination with EUD-based NTCP and TCP Radiobiological Models.
PURPOSE
The current research compared radiobiological and dosimetric results for simultaneous integrated boost (SIB) plans employing RapidArc and IMRT planning procedures in oropharyngeal cancer from head-and-neck cancer (HNC) patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The indigenously developed Python-based software was used in this study for generation and analysis. Twelve patients with forty-eight total plans with SIB were planned using Rapid arc (2 and 3 arcs) and IMRT (7 and 9 fields) and compared with radiobiological models Lyman, Kutcher, Burman (LKB) and EUD (Equivalent Uniform Dose) along with physical index such as homogeneity index(HI), conformity index(CI) of target volumes.
RESULTS
These models' inputs are the dose-volume histograms (DVHs) calculated by the treatment planning system (TPS). The values obtained vary from one model to the other for the same technique and patient. The maximum dose to the brainstem and spinal cord and the mean dose to the parotids were analysed both dosimetrically and radiobiologically, such as the LKB model effective volume, equivalent uniform dose, EUD-based normal tissue complication probability, and normal tissue integral dose. The mean and max dose to target volume with conformity, homogeneity index, tumor control probability compared with treatment times, and monitor units.
CONCLUSION
Rapid arc (3 arcs) resulted in significantly better OAR sparing, dose homogeneity, and conformity. The findings indicate that the rapid arc plan has improved dose distribution in the target volume compared with IMRT, but the tumor control probability obtained for the two planning methods, Rapid arc (3 arcs) and IMRT (7 fields), are similar. The treatment time and monitor units for the Rapid arc (3 arcs) were superior to other planning methods and considered to be standard in head & neck radiotherapy.
Topics: Humans; Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted; Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated; Oropharyngeal Neoplasms; Radiotherapy Dosage; Organs at Risk; Prognosis; Radiometry; Radiobiology
PubMed: 38809623
DOI: 10.31557/APJCP.2024.25.5.1515 -
Frontiers in Oncology 2024Metastatic spinal lesions are a significant cause of morbidity and decreased quality of life in those with a high tumor burden. Despite treatment modalities such as...
BACKGROUND
Metastatic spinal lesions are a significant cause of morbidity and decreased quality of life in those with a high tumor burden. Despite treatment modalities such as medical therapy (e.g., chemotherapy, steroids), spinal augmentation procedures, and radiation therapy, many patients still experience refractory back pain due to neoplastic infiltration of the vertebral body and/or pathologic compression fractures. With the aim to address refractory pain in patients who have exhausted conventional treatment options, Stryker developed the OptablateTM Bone Tumor Ablation system (BTA; Stryker Corporation, Kalamazoo, MI), which delivers radiofrequency energy to pathologic vertebral body lesions. In this preliminary single-institution study, we characterize the use of the BTA system in 11 patients undergoing kyphoplasty for pathologic spinal lesions with the goal to demonstrate the impact of this novel technology on refractory pain in this challenging clinical setting.
METHODS
A single-center retrospective chart review was performed on all patients identified as those receiving tumor ablation/kyphoplasty for spinal neoplasms using the OptablateTM BTA system performed by a single surgeon at the University of Oklahoma Medical Center. Sex, age, primary lesion type, presenting symptomatology, spinal level, time of follow-up, and outcome were obtained from the electronic medical record (EMR).
RESULTS
Eleven patients (4 males, 7 females) with a mean age of 62 (range, 38-82) years had an average follow-up time of 6 months. Presenting symptoms attributed to spinal pathology included back pain (n = 11, 100%), pathologic fracture (n = 6, 55%), and lower extremity weakness (n = 3, 27%). A total of 20 lesions were ablated at 12 vertebral levels. Eight patients (73%) had improved pain. No complications were reported.
CONCLUSION
This preliminary study documents the safety of the BTA system, in addition to its diverse use across many levels. The majority of patients reported improvement in their pain. Further study is required to fully characterize the use of the BTA system in those with neoplastic spinal pathology.
PubMed: 38800379
DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2024.1412430 -
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and... May 2024Vertebral hemangiomas (VHs) are the most common benign tumors of the spinal column and are often encountered incidentally during routine spinal imaging. (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
Vertebral hemangiomas (VHs) are the most common benign tumors of the spinal column and are often encountered incidentally during routine spinal imaging.
METHODS
A retrospective review of the inpatient and outpatient hospital records at our institution was performed for the diagnosis of VHs from January 2005 to September 2023. Search filters included "vertebral hemangioma," "back pain," "weakness," "radiculopathy," and "focal neurological deficits." Radiographic evaluation of these patients included plain X-rays, CT, and MRI. Following confirmation of a diagnosis of VH, these images were used to generate the figures used in this manuscript. Moreover, an extensive literature search was conducted using PubMed for the literature review portion of the manuscript.
RESULT
VHs are benign vascular proliferations that cause remodeling of bony trabeculae in the vertebral body of the spinal column. Horizontal trabeculae deteriorate leading to thickening of vertical trabeculae which causes a striated appearance on sagittal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT), "Corduroy sign," and a punctuated appearance on axial imaging, "Polka dot sign." These findings are seen in "typical vertebral hemangiomas" due to a low vascular-to-fat ratio of the lesion. Contrarily, atypical vertebral hemangiomas may or may not demonstrate the "Corduroy" or "Polka-dot" signs due to lower amounts of fat and a higher vascular component. Atypical vertebral hemangiomas often mimic other neoplastic pathologies, making diagnosis challenging. Although most VHs are asymptomatic, aggressive vertebral hemangiomas can present with neurologic sequelae such as myelopathy and radiculopathy due to nerve root and/or spinal cord compression. Asymptomatic vertebral hemangiomas do not require therapy, and there are many treatment options for vertebral hemangiomas causing pain, radiculopathy, and/or myelopathy. Surgery (corpectomy, laminectomy), percutaneous techniques (vertebroplasty, sclerotherapy, embolization), and radiotherapy can be used in combination or isolation as appropriate. Specific treatment options depend on the lesion's size/location and the extent of neural element compression. There is no consensus on the optimal treatment plan for symptomatic vertebral hemangioma patients, although management algorithms have been proposed.
CONCLUSION
While typical vertebral hemangioma diagnosis is relatively straightforward, the differential diagnosis is broad for atypical and aggressive lesions. There is an ongoing debate as to the best approach for managing symptomatic cases, however, surgical resection is often considered first line treatment for patients with neurologic deficit.
Topics: Humans; Hemangioma; Spinal Neoplasms; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Retrospective Studies; Tomography, X-Ray Computed; Male; Female; Middle Aged
PubMed: 38789994
DOI: 10.1186/s13018-024-04799-5 -
BMC Urology May 2024Patients with spinal cord injury have a relatively high risk for bladder cancer and often complicated with bladder cancer in advanced stages, and the degree of...
BACKGROUND
Patients with spinal cord injury have a relatively high risk for bladder cancer and often complicated with bladder cancer in advanced stages, and the degree of aggressiveness of malignancy is high. Most of the literature is based on disease clinical features while, our study reviews the clinical characteristics and molecular mechanisms of spinal cord injury patients with bladder cancer, so that it might help clinicians better recognize and manage these patients.
METHOD
We searched PubMed, Web of Science and Embase, using retrieval type like ("Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction" OR "Spinal cord injury" OR "Spinal Cord Trauma") AND ("bladder cancer" OR "bladder neoplasm" OR "bladder carcinoma" OR "Urinary Bladder Neoplasms" OR "Bladder Tumor"). In Web of Science, the retrieval type was searched as "Topic", and in PubMed and Embase, as "All Field". The methodological quality of eligible studies and their risk of bias were assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. This article is registered in PROSPERO with the CBD number: CRD42024508514.
RESULT
In WOS, we searched 219 related papers, in PubMed, 122 and in Embase, 363. Thus, a total of 254 articles were included after passing the screening, within a time range between 1960 and 2023. A comprehensive analysis of the data showed that the mortality and incidence rates of bladder cancer in spinal cord injury patients were higher than that of the general population, and the most frequent pathological type was squamous cell carcinoma. In parallel to long-term urinary tract infection and indwelling catheterization, the role of molecules such as NO, MiR 1949 and Rb 1. was found to be crucial pathogenetically.
CONCLUSION
This review highlights the risk of bladder cancer in SCI patients, comprehensively addressing the clinical characteristics and related molecular mechanisms. However, given that there are few studies on the molecular mechanisms of bladder cancer in spinal cord injury, further research is needed to expand the understanding of the disease.
Topics: Spinal Cord Injuries; Humans; Urinary Bladder Neoplasms
PubMed: 38778291
DOI: 10.1186/s12894-024-01457-0 -
Asian Journal of Neurosurgery Mar 2024Desmoid tumors are locally aggressive, benign neoplasms originating in connective tissues. Although the exact pathophysiology remains unknown, antecedent trauma or...
Desmoid tumors are locally aggressive, benign neoplasms originating in connective tissues. Although the exact pathophysiology remains unknown, antecedent trauma or surgery are believed to be important contributing factors. The occurrence of paraspinal desmoid tumor in pediatric patients is extremely uncommon. Here, we present an exceedingly rare case of a pediatric patient with no surgical or family history who developed a paraspinal desmoid tumor. A 9-year-old female patient presented with 4 months of progressive back pain, right lower extremity weakness, and numbness. Spinal imaging revealed a left epidural paraspinal mass compressing her thoracic spinal cord and extending into the left thoracic cavity. A multidisciplinary approach with neurosurgery and thoracic surgery enabled gross total resection of the lesion. The patient had complete resolution of her symptoms with no signs of residual tumor on postoperative imaging. Pathology revealed a desmoid tumor that avidly stained for beta-catenin. On her last follow-up, she developed a recurrence, to which she was started on sorafenib therapy. Desmoid tumors are rare connective tissue neoplasms that often occur after local tissue trauma, such as that caused by surgery. This report presents a rare case of a pediatric paraspinal desmoid tumor that occurred in a patient with no surgical or family history. Such tumors should undergo surgical resection for symptomatic relief and tissue diagnosis. Close clinical and radiographic surveillance are essential in these patients due to the high recurrence rates of desmoid tumor.
PubMed: 38751393
DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-1771366 -
JPMA. the Journal of the Pakistan... Apr 2024Enbloc Sacrectomy is the procedure of choice for aggressive sacral lesions but not widely practiced in Pakistan, both by Neurosurgeons and Orthopaedic surgeons. Only one...
Enbloc Sacrectomy is the procedure of choice for aggressive sacral lesions but not widely practiced in Pakistan, both by Neurosurgeons and Orthopaedic surgeons. Only one case has been mentioned in indexed local literature so far and that too not operated in Pakistan. The case of a 27 year old neurologically intact male is presented. He had a huge residual mass and midline non-healing wound after two attempts at intralesional debulking and one full course of local irradiation. He presented to the Mayo Hospital, Lahore on 29th December 2021 for a redo surgery of sacral chordoma. A marginal excision was achieved utilizing posterior only approach. This case will help to understand the key steps in enbloc mid-Sacrectomy and importance of involving multidisciplinary team for ensuring adequate wound closure.
Topics: Humans; Chordoma; Male; Sacrum; Adult; Spinal Neoplasms; Reoperation
PubMed: 38751282
DOI: 10.47391/JPMA.9145 -
Surgical Neurology International 2024Intradural extramedullary (IDEM) spinal cord tumors account for approximately two-thirds of benign intraspinal neoplasms. These are amenable to gross total excision but...
BACKGROUND
Intradural extramedullary (IDEM) spinal cord tumors account for approximately two-thirds of benign intraspinal neoplasms. These are amenable to gross total excision but can have variable functional outcomes, which plays a key role in assessing their impact on a patient's quality of life. Understanding the functional outcomes associated with these tumors is crucial for healthcare professionals to devise appropriate treatment plans and provide comprehensive care.
METHODS
In this study, we retrospectively reviewed the outcomes of 130 patients with IDEM tumors who underwent surgery in the past six years between January 2017 and December 2022 at a single institution. Patient demographics, symptoms, and tumor characteristics (anatomical and pathological) in all operated spinal IDEM tumors were analyzed. The neurological findings obtained during the preoperative stage and the postoperative follow-up were evaluated according to the Frankel grading. The back pain was assessed using the Denis pain scale (DPS).
RESULTS
The age range, gender distribution, presentation, histopathology, and tumor characteristics were analyzed. The histopathological outcomes of the study were as follows: 56 cases of schwannoma, 37 cases of meningiomas, 16 patients of neurofibroma, six cases of epidermoid cyst, five cases each of ependymoma and dermoid cyst, three cases of arachnoid cyst, two cases of metastasis, and one case of paraganglioma. Pain was the most common symptom (38.5%), followed by weakness in limbs (31.5%), paresthesia/numbness (22.3%), and sphincter disturbance (7.7%). Complete total resection was seen in 93% of cases, with 7% undergoing subtotal excision. The complications encountered were - four cases of surgical site infection and one case each of cerebrospinal fluid leak, pseudomeningocele, and epidural hematoma. In our series, 49.3% of patients had significantly good improvement in functional outcomes as per improvement in Frankel score, and 43% of patients had good functional improvement. Significant functional improvement was noted at immediate postoperative follow-up, 2-week follow-up, and six-month follow-up periods. Reoccurrence was seen in 7 cases (5.4%). The DPS score mean values showed a significant decrease over the follow-up duration as compared to preoperative mean values. Significantly poor outcome was seen in IDEM tumours present anteriorly.
CONCLUSION
The IDEM tumors are usually benign and are readily detected by contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging scans. These have variable functional outcomes in different centers. Assessing this functional outcome is an essential aspect of managing IDEM spinal tumors. It was observed through our study that the ventral location of the tumor, thoracic tumors, and poor preoperative neurological status of the patient correspond with poorer postoperative functional outcomes. Furthermore, a significant decrease in the pain symptoms with improvement of Frankel score was seen postoperatively, thus this being suggestive of a significant improvement of functional outcome after surgery. This study helps to conclude that the morbidity associated with the resection of IDEM tumors is not as significant as originally thought to be.
PubMed: 38742010
DOI: 10.25259/SNI_689_2023 -
The Journal of Medical Investigation :... 2024Augmented reality navigation is the one of the navigation technologies that allows computer-generated virtual images to be projected onto a real-world environment....
BACKGROUND
Augmented reality navigation is the one of the navigation technologies that allows computer-generated virtual images to be projected onto a real-world environment. Augmented reality navigation can be used in spinal tumor surgery. However, it is unknown if there are any pitfalls when using this technique.
CASE PRESENTATION
The patient in this report underwent complete resection of a cauda equina tumor at the L2-L3 level using microscope-based augmented reality navigation. Although the registration error of navigation was <1 mm, we found a discrepancy between the augmented reality navigation images and the actual location of the tumor, which we have called "navigation mismatch". This mismatch, which was caused by the mobility of the spinal tumor in the dura mater, seems to be one of the pitfalls of augmented reality navigation for spinal tumors.
CONCLUSIONS
Combined use of intraoperative ultrasound and augmented reality navigation seems advisable in such cases. J. Med. Invest. 71 : 174-176, February, 2024.
Topics: Humans; Augmented Reality; Cauda Equina; Peripheral Nervous System Neoplasms; Surgery, Computer-Assisted; Male; Female; Middle Aged
PubMed: 38735716
DOI: 10.2152/jmi.71.174 -
Acta Neuropathologica May 2024
Topics: Humans; Ependymoma; Spinal Cord Neoplasms; Male; Female; Adult; Middle Aged; Adolescent; Child; Young Adult; Child, Preschool; Aged
PubMed: 38735021
DOI: 10.1007/s00401-024-02740-y -
Cancers Apr 2024Malignant spinal lesions (MSLs) are frequently the first manifestation of malignant disease. Spinal care, diagnostic evaluation, and the initiation of systemic therapy...
A Combined Cyto- and Histopathological Diagnostic Approach Reduces Time to Diagnosis and Time to Therapy in First Manifestation of Metastatic Spinal Disease: A Cohort Study.
Malignant spinal lesions (MSLs) are frequently the first manifestation of malignant disease. Spinal care, diagnostic evaluation, and the initiation of systemic therapy are crucial for outcomes in patients (pts) with advanced cancer. However, histopathology (HP) may be time consuming. The additional evaluation of spinal lesions using cytopathology (CP) has the potential to reduce the time to diagnosis (TTD) and time to therapy (TTT). CP and HP specimens from spinal lesions were evaluated in parallel in 61 pts (CP/HP group). Furthermore, 139 pts in whom only HP was performed were analyzed (HP group). We analyzed the TTD of CP and HP within the CP/HP group. Furthermore, we compared the TTD and TTT between the groups. The mean TTD in CP was 1.7 ± 1.7 days (d) and 8.4 ± 3.6 d in HP ( < 0.001). In 13 pts in the CP/HP group (24.1%), specific therapy was initiated based on the CP findings in combination with imaging and biomarker results before completion of HP. The mean TTT in the CP/HP group was 21.0 ± 15.8 d and was significantly shorter compared to the HP group (28.6 ± 23.3 d) ( = 0.034). Concurrent CP for MSLs significantly reduces the TTD and TTT. As a result, incorporating concurrent CP for analyzing spinal lesions suspected of malignancy might have the potential to enhance pts' quality of life and prognosis in advanced cancer. Therefore, we recommend implementing CP as a standard procedure for the evaluation of MSLs.
PubMed: 38730611
DOI: 10.3390/cancers16091659