首页|Aneurysmal bone cyst of the spine in adult patients: A systematic review and comparison of primary vs secondary lesions

Aneurysmal bone cyst of the spine in adult patients: A systematic review and comparison of primary vs secondary lesions

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? 2022 Elsevier LtdBackground: Spine aneurysmal bone cysts (ABCs) rarely occur in adults. Primary and secondary lesions may show some differences and require appropriate treatments. Objective: To systematically review the literature on adult spine ABCs. Methods: PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, and Web-of-Science were searched. Clinical-radiological features, treatments, and outcomes were analyzed and compared between primary vs secondary adult spine ABCs. Results: We included 80 studies comprising 220 patients. Primary spine ABCs were more frequent (76.4%). Main symptoms were lower-back-pain (42.8%) and motor deficits (31.2%). Tumors were mostly thoracic (31.4%) or cervical (26.8%), showing lytic (70.4%) and/or cystic (52.3%) appearances. Surgical resection (79.1%) was preferred over biopsy (20.9%). Most primary ABCs underwent curettage with bone grafting (62.1%) and laminectomy (39.1%) (P < 0.001), while most secondary ABCs underwent corpectomy (51%) and spine fixation (93.9%) (P < 0.001). Radiotherapy was delivered in 58 patients (26.4%), and embolization in 37 (16.8%). Symptomatic improvement was reported in 91.8% cases, with no differences based on etiology nor extent-of-resection. Median follow-up was 28.5 months, significantly superior in secondary ABCs. Secondary ABCs had significantly higher rates of tumor recurrence (19.2%; P = 0.011) and death (5.8%; P = 0.002). Conclusion: Surgical resection, radiotherapy, and embolization are effective in managing adult spine ABCs. Secondary tumors have worse prognoses requiring more aggressive treatments.

AdultAneurysmal bone cystDenosumabEmbolizationSpineSurgical oncology

Palmisciano P.、Hunter M.、Lokesh N.、Bin Alamer O.、Scalia G.、Giammalva G.R.、Maugeri R.、Iacopino D.G.、Umana G.E.、Haider A.S.

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Department of Neurosurgery Trauma Center Gamma Knife Center Cannizzaro Hospital

University of Texas Southwestern Medical School

King Abdullah International Medical Research Center

Department of Neurosurgery Highly Specialized Hospital of National Importance “Garibaldi” Catania

Unit of Neurosurgery Department of Biomedical Neurosciences and Advanced Diagnostics University of

Texas A&M University College of Medicine

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2022

Journal of clinical neuroscience

Journal of clinical neuroscience

SCI
ISSN:0967-5868
年,卷(期):2022.100
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