Rigney Grant H, Massaad Elie, Kiapour Ali, Razak Shahaan S, Duvall Julia B, Burrows Akeive, Khalid Syed I, De La Garza Ramos Rafael, Tobert Daniel G, Williamson Theresa, Shankar Ganesh M, Schoenfeld Andrew J, Shin John H
Departments of1Neurosurgery and.
2Department of Neurosurgery, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; and.
J Neurosurg Spine. 2023 Jul 7;39(4):557-567. doi: 10.3171/2023.5.SPINE2367. Print 2023 Oct 1.
Surgery for metastatic spinal tumors can have a substantial impact on patients' quality of life by alleviating pain, improving function, and correcting spinal instability when indicated. The decision to operate is difficult because many patients with cancer are frail. Studies have highlighted the importance of preoperative nutritional status assessments; however, little is known about which aspects of nutrition accurately inform clinical outcomes. This study investigates the interaction and prognostic importance of various nutritional and frailty measures in patients with spinal metastases.
A retrospective analysis of consecutive patients who underwent surgery for spinal metastases between 2014 and 2020 at the Massachusetts General Hospital was performed. Patients were stratified according to the New England Spinal Metastasis Score (NESMS). Frailty was assessed using the metastatic spinal tumor frailty index. Nutrition was assessed using the prognostic nutritional index (PNI), preoperative body mass index, albumin, albumin-to-globulin ratio, and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio. Outcomes included postoperative survival and complication rates, with focus on wound-related complications.
This study included 154 individuals (39% female; mean [SD] age 63.23 [13.14] years). NESMS 0 and NESMS 3 demonstrated the highest proportions of severely frail patients (56.2%) and nonfrail patients (16.1%), respectively. Patients with normal nutritional status (albumin-to-globulin ratio and PNI) had a better prognosis than those with poor nutritional status when stratified by NESMS. Multivariable regression adjusted for NESMS and frailty showed that a PNI > 40.4 was significantly associated with decreased odds of 90-day complications (OR 0.93, 95% CI 0.85-0.98). After accounting for age, sex, primary tumor pathology, physical function, nutritional status, and frailty, a preoperative nutrition consultation was associated with a decrease in postoperative wound-related complications (average marginal effect -5.00%; 95% CI -1.50% to -8.9%).
The PNI was most predictive of complications and may be a key biomarker for risk stratification in the 90 days following surgery. Nutrition consultation was associated with a reduced risk of wound-related complications, attesting to the importance of this preoperative intervention. These findings suggest that nutrition plays an important role in the postsurgical course and should be considered when developing a treatment plan for spinal metastases.
转移性脊柱肿瘤手术通过缓解疼痛、改善功能以及在必要时纠正脊柱不稳定,可对患者的生活质量产生重大影响。手术决策困难,因为许多癌症患者身体虚弱。研究强调了术前营养状况评估的重要性;然而,对于哪些营养方面能准确反映临床结果知之甚少。本研究调查了脊柱转移瘤患者各种营养和虚弱指标之间的相互作用及其预后重要性。
对2014年至2020年在马萨诸塞州总医院接受脊柱转移瘤手术的连续患者进行回顾性分析。根据新英格兰脊柱转移瘤评分(NESMS)对患者进行分层。使用转移性脊柱肿瘤虚弱指数评估虚弱程度。使用预后营养指数(PNI)、术前体重指数、白蛋白、白蛋白与球蛋白比值以及血小板与淋巴细胞比值评估营养状况。结果包括术后生存率和并发症发生率,重点关注与伤口相关的并发症。
本研究纳入了154例患者(39%为女性;平均[标准差]年龄63.23[13.14]岁)。NESMS 0和NESMS 3分别显示出严重虚弱患者(56.2%)和非虚弱患者(16.1%)的比例最高。按NESMS分层时,营养状况正常(白蛋白与球蛋白比值和PNI)的患者比营养状况差的患者预后更好。对NESMS和虚弱程度进行多变量回归调整后显示,PNI>40.4与90天并发症发生率降低显著相关(比值比0.93,95%置信区间0.85 - 0.98)。在考虑年龄、性别、原发肿瘤病理、身体功能、营养状况和虚弱程度后,术前营养咨询与术后伤口相关并发症的减少相关(平均边际效应-5.00%;95%置信区间-1.50%至-8.9%)。
PNI对并发症的预测性最强,可能是术后90天风险分层的关键生物标志物。营养咨询与伤口相关并发症风险降低相关,证明了这种术前干预的重要性。这些发现表明,营养在术后过程中起重要作用,在制定脊柱转移瘤治疗方案时应予以考虑。