Department of Neurosurgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2011 Dec;76(6):580-5. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2011.05.016.
Malignant osseous spinal neoplasms are aggressive tumors associated with poor outcomes despite aggressive multidisciplinary measures. It remains unknown whether increased local tumor invasion at time of treatment predicts worse survival. The surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (SEER) registry was reviewed to determine whether extent of local tumor invasion at presentation was independently associated with overall survival.
The SEER registry (1973-2003) was queried to identify cases of histologically confirmed primary spinal chordoma, chondrosarcoma, osteosarcoma, or Ewing sarcoma. Extent of local invasion was defined at time of care by histology, radiology, or intraoperative assessment and classified as confined (tumor within periosteum), local invasion (extension to surrounding tissues), or distal metastasis. The association of extent of local tumor invasion with overall survival was assessed by Cox analysis.
One thousand eight hundred ninety-two patients were identified (414 chordoma, 579 chondrosarcoma, 430 osteosarcoma, 469 Ewing sarcoma). Overall median survival was histology specific (osteosarcoma, 11 months; Ewing sarcoma, 26 months; chondrosarcoma, 37 months; chordoma, 50 months) and correlated with extent of local tissue invasion or metastasis at presentation. Presence of metastasis was associated with marked decrease in survival (P < 0.001) for all tumor types. For patients with isolated spine tumors, neoplasms confined within the periosteum were associated with improved overall survival independent of age, radiotherapy, or surgical resection for chordoma (hazard ratio [HR], 0.50; P = 0.08), chondrosarcoma (HR, 0.62; P = 0.03), and osteosarcoma (HR, 0.68; P = 0.05), but not Ewing sarcoma (HR, 0.62; P = 0.27).
The preoperative radiographic recognition of local tissue invasion may identify patients with a more aggressive tumor and help guide the level of aggressiveness in subsequent treatment strategies.
恶性骨脊柱肿瘤是一种侵袭性肿瘤,尽管采用了积极的多学科治疗措施,但其预后仍较差。目前尚不清楚治疗时肿瘤局部侵袭范围是否与生存时间相关。本研究通过检索监测、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)数据库,旨在确定肿瘤局部侵袭范围与总生存时间的相关性。
通过检索 SEER 数据库(1973-2003 年),收集经组织学证实的原发性脊柱脊索瘤、软骨肉瘤、骨肉瘤或尤文肉瘤患者。肿瘤局部侵袭范围根据组织学、影像学或术中评估结果定义,分为局限型(肿瘤位于骨膜内)、局部侵袭型(侵犯周围组织)或远处转移。采用 Cox 回归分析评估肿瘤局部侵袭范围与总生存时间的相关性。
共纳入 1892 例患者(脊索瘤 414 例、软骨肉瘤 579 例、骨肉瘤 430 例、尤文肉瘤 469 例)。不同组织学类型的患者中位生存时间不同(骨肉瘤 11 个月、尤文肉瘤 26 个月、软骨肉瘤 37 个月、脊索瘤 50 个月),且与肿瘤局部组织侵犯或转移范围相关。肿瘤转移与所有肿瘤类型的生存时间明显缩短相关(P < 0.001)。对于孤立性脊柱肿瘤患者,局限于骨膜内的肿瘤与脊索瘤(HR 0.50,P = 0.08)、软骨肉瘤(HR 0.62,P = 0.03)和骨肉瘤(HR 0.68,P = 0.05)患者的总生存时间改善相关,但与尤文肉瘤患者(HR 0.62,P = 0.27)无关。
术前影像学检查发现肿瘤局部组织侵犯有助于识别侵袭性更强的肿瘤,从而指导后续治疗策略的选择。