• Eur Spine J · Feb 2010

    Posterior transpedicular corpectomy for malignant cervical spine tumors.

    • Mohammed Eleraky, Matthias Setzer, and Frank D Vrionis.
    • Neuro-Oncology Program, Department of Neurosurgery, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33612, USA.
    • Eur Spine J. 2010 Feb 1; 19 (2): 257-62.

    AbstractThe goal of this study was to assess surgical clinical and radiographic outcomes of using a posterior transpedicular approach (posterolateral) for ventral malignant tumors of the cervical spine. Access to ventral lesions of the cervical spine can be challenging in patients with malignant tumors. Anterior approaches are the gold standard for ventral pathology in the cervical spine, however, there are cases, where a posterior approach is indicated due to multilevel disease, previous radiation, swallowing difficulty with difficulty in retraction of trachea and esophagus, and in cases where circumferential fusion cannot be done due to patients' poor medical condition. A single approach could provide spinal stabilization and removal of tumor. Eight cases of ventral cervical spine malignant tumors (7 metastatic and 1 chordoma) underwent corpectomy through a posterior transpedicular (posterolateral) approach. Tumors involved C2 (5), C3 (1), C5 (1), and C7 (1). Six cases had anterior reconstruction and three column fusion, and two cases had posterior fusion alone. Gross total resection was achieved in all cases. No hardware failure or worsening of neurological condition was seen (4 patient were neurologically intact and remained intact after surgery and 4 patients improved in their Frankel grade). Pain improved in all patients, mean visual analog scale preoperative was 86 and improved to 22 after surgery. In two patients the vertebral artery was ligated without sequelae. We conclude that cervical spine transpedicular (posterolateral) approach is useful in cases where an anterior approach or a circumferential approach is not an option. It avoids the morbidity of anterior transcervical, transternal, and transoral procedures while providing decompression of neural elements and allowing three column stabilization when needed.

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