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Vertebral body collapse after spine stereotactic body radiation therapy: a single-center institutional experience Cover

Vertebral body collapse after spine stereotactic body radiation therapy: a single-center institutional experience

Open Access
|Jun 2024

Abstract

Background

Spine stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for the treatment of metastatic disease is increasingly utilized owing to improved pain and local control over conventional regimens. Vertebral body collapse (VBC) is an important toxicity following spine SBRT. We investigated our institutional experience with spine SBRT as it relates to VBC and spinal instability neoplastic score (SINS).

Patients and methods

Records of 83 patients with 100 spinal lesions treated with SBRT between 2007 and 2022 were reviewed. Clinical information was abstracted from the medical record. The primary endpoint was post-treatment VBC. Logistic univariate analysis was performed to identify clinical factors associated with VBC.

Results

Median dose and number of fractions used was 24 Gy and 3 fractions, respectively. There were 10 spine segments that developed VBC (10%) after spine SBRT. Median time to VBC was 2.4 months. Of the 11 spine segments that underwent kyphoplasty prior to SBRT, none developed subsequent VBC. No factors were associated with VBC on univariate analysis.

Conclusions

The rate of vertebral body collapse following spine SBRT is low. Prophylactic kyphoplasty may provide protection against VBC and should be considered for patients at high risk for fracture.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/raon-2024-0033 | Journal eISSN: 1581-3207 | Journal ISSN: 1318-2099
Language: English
Page range: 425 - 431
Submitted on: Dec 26, 2023
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Accepted on: Apr 26, 2024
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Published on: Jun 12, 2024
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2024 Arsh Issany, Austin J Iovoli, Richard Wang, Rohil Shekher, Sung Jun Ma, Victor Goulenko, Fatemeh Fekrmandi, Dheerendra Prasad, published by Association of Radiology and Oncology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.