Weber Clemens, Gulati Sasha, Jakola Asgeir Store, Habiba Samer, Nygaard Øystein Petter, Johannesen Tom Børge, Solheim Ole
*Department of Neurosurgery †National Advisory Unit on Spinal Surgery, St. Olavs Hospital, Trondheim University Hospital, Trondheim, Norway ‡Department of Neuroscience, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway §National Competence Centre for Ultrasound and Image-Guided Therapy, Trondheim, Norway ¶MI Lab, Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway ‖Department of Neurosurgery, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway; and **Cancer Registry of Norway, Oslo, Norway.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2014 Jul 15;39(16):E967-73. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000000412.
Prospective national population-based cohort study.
To evaluate national population-based data on histopathologically verified intraspinal tumors and explore time trends in incidence and surgery rates and associations with the increased availability of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during 1993 and 2011.
There is a relative lack of updated epidemiological data on primary intraspinal tumors and most previous studies do not capture the advances in diagnostics and surgical treatment in the era of modern neuroimaging. The possible effect of the increasing availability of MRI on incidence rates and clinical management of primary intraspinal tumors is not known.
We included all patients with a histologically verified intraspinal tumor diagnosed between 1993 and 2011 in a population-based cohort based on data from the Cancer Registry of Norway. The incidence and surgery rates were calculated and compared with the number of available MRI scanners in Norway.
We identified 1104 patients diagnosed with a primary intraspinal tumor. The incidence rate based on the Norwegian population between 1993 and 2011 was 1.28 per 100,000. In 1993, there were 8 MRI scanners in Norway increasing to 125 in 2011. There seems to be a plateau in the increase in incidence rates after 2002 where the subsequent increase in the number of MRI scanners did not seem to be followed by further increases of intraspinal tumor surgery.
The incidence rate of primary intraspinal tumors in Norway changed dramatically during the study period, stabilizing around 1.5 per 100,000 per year since 2002. There was an increase in surgery for all major subgroups. This increase in surgical activity seems to correlate with the simultaneous large increase in the availability of diagnostic magnetic resonance imaging.
基于全国人口的前瞻性队列研究。
评估基于全国人口的经组织病理学证实的椎管内肿瘤数据,探讨1993年至2011年期间发病率、手术率的时间趋势以及与磁共振成像(MRI)可用性增加之间的关联。
原发性椎管内肿瘤相对缺乏最新的流行病学数据,并且大多数先前的研究未涵盖现代神经影像学时代诊断和手术治疗方面的进展。MRI可用性增加对原发性椎管内肿瘤发病率和临床管理的可能影响尚不清楚。
我们纳入了基于挪威癌症登记处数据的、在1993年至2011年间诊断为经组织学证实的椎管内肿瘤的所有患者。计算发病率和手术率,并与挪威可用MRI扫描仪的数量进行比较。
我们确定了1104例诊断为原发性椎管内肿瘤的患者。1993年至2011年基于挪威人口的发病率为每10万人1.28例。1993年挪威有8台MRI扫描仪,到2011年增加到125台。2002年后发病率的增长似乎趋于平稳,随后MRI扫描仪数量的增加似乎并未伴随着椎管内肿瘤手术的进一步增加。
在研究期间,挪威原发性椎管内肿瘤的发病率发生了显著变化,自2002年以来稳定在每年每10万人1.5例左右。所有主要亚组的手术率均有所增加。手术活动的增加似乎与诊断性磁共振成像可用性的同时大幅增加相关。