Department of Rehabilitation and Regenerative Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital - University Hospital of Columbia and Cornell, New York, New York, U.S.A.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, U.S.A.
Pain Pract. 2021 Mar;21(3):285-298. doi: 10.1111/papr.12957. Epub 2020 Nov 1.
Spinal malignancy-related pain results from tumor, fracture, instability, inflammation, and/or nerve root/spinal cord compression. Systemic corticosteroids are commonly used but have many undesirable adverse effects that impact quality of life and continuation of cancer treatments. Epidural steroid injections (ESIs) may be a viable alternative pain treatment.
This study starts with a pragmatic review on the efficacy of ESIs to treat spinal malignancy-related pain. Given the limited evidence, we supplement the study with a single-center, retrospective review.
A pragmatic review using PRISMA guidelines was conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, SCOPUS, and Cochrane Review. Then, a retrospective chart review was performed.
A pragmatic review yielded 10 patients who underwent ESI for spinal malignancy-related pain. Three patients had "excellent" relief (≥ 50% relief), who all received thoracic injections. This amounted to level IV evidence and an inconclusive recommendation (Grade C) as per Wright's criteria. In our retrospective review, all thoracic cases achieved at least "moderate" pain improvement (30% to 49% relief). 55.6% had "excellent" relief. Lumbosacral injections resulted in 86.0% with at least "moderate" relief and 69.8% with "excellent" relief. Caudal injections were less likely to benefit than lumbosacral injections (P = 0.02). The transforaminal approach resulted in the best relief. There were no adverse events.
There is inconclusive evidence to use ESIs to treat spinal malignancy-related pain in the current literature. Our retrospective review provides level III evidence for our conclusion that ESIs are safe and efficacious to treat spinal malignancy-related pain. Thoracic/lumbosacral injections led to significantly better pain relief compared with caudal injections.
脊柱恶性肿瘤相关疼痛源于肿瘤、骨折、不稳定、炎症和/或神经根/脊髓受压。全身性皮质类固醇类药物通常被使用,但它们有许多不良的副作用,会影响生活质量和癌症治疗的继续。硬膜外类固醇注射(ESI)可能是一种可行的替代疼痛治疗方法。
本研究首先对 ESI 治疗脊柱恶性肿瘤相关疼痛的疗效进行了实用的综述。鉴于证据有限,我们补充了一项单中心回顾性研究。
使用 PRISMA 指南对 MEDLINE、EMBASE、SCOPUS 和 Cochrane 综述进行了实用的综述。然后进行了回顾性图表审查。
实用的综述产生了 10 名接受 ESI 治疗脊柱恶性肿瘤相关疼痛的患者。3 名患者的缓解效果“极好”(≥50%的缓解),他们均接受了胸椎注射。根据 Wright 标准,这相当于四级证据和不确定的推荐(C 级)。在我们的回顾性研究中,所有胸椎病例均实现了至少“中度”疼痛改善(缓解 30%至 49%)。55.6%的患者有“极好”的缓解效果。腰骶部注射的缓解率至少为“中度”的占 86.0%,“极好”的占 69.8%。与腰骶部注射相比,骶尾部注射的获益可能性较低(P=0.02)。经椎间孔入路的效果最好。没有不良反应。
目前的文献中,使用 ESI 治疗脊柱恶性肿瘤相关疼痛的证据尚无定论。我们的回顾性研究为我们的结论提供了三级证据,即 ESI 治疗脊柱恶性肿瘤相关疼痛是安全有效的。与骶尾部注射相比,胸椎/腰骶部注射能显著更好地缓解疼痛。