Incidence, associated factors, and survival in metastatic spinal cord compression secondary to lung cancer
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The Spine Journal
Abstract
BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Bone metastasis (BM) occurs frequently in patients with lung can cer (LC). The most affected are the bones of the spine, increasing the risk of developing metastatic
spinal cord compression (MSCC). Although MSCC is one of the most disabling complications, few
studies have reported relevant results related to its frequency and prognosis among patients with LC.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence and associated factors of the
development of MSCC after BM with LC and its prognosis.
STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: This is a cohort study.
PATIENT SAMPLE: A cohort of 112 patients with BM because of LC, whose treatment was per formed exclusively at the National Cancer Institute, was analyzed.
OUTCOME MEASURES: Study outcome measures included incidence of MSCC, factors asso ciated with MSCC, and survival analysis.
METHODS: A cohort study was performed involving patients with BM because of LC diagnosed
between 2007 and 2011. Clinical and sociodemographic data were extracted from the physical and
electronic medical records because of initial diagnosis (up until December 2013). The association be tween the independent variables and the outcomes was performed by using crude and adjusted odds
ratios (ORs), assuming 95% confidence intervals (CIs). For the exploratory evaluation between the
independent variables and the time until the outcomes, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was con ducted. To identify if the differences between the curves were statistically significant, a log-tank test
was calculated. A Cox multiple regression model, using the forward stepwise method, was applied,
aiming to estimate the factors associated with time to death in the different exposure groups.
RESULTS: Of the 112 patients with BM, 31 (27.7%) developed MSCC. The univariate analysis
showed that patients with three or more involved vertebrae revealed a 6.1 times greater risk of de veloping MSCC, compared with those with up to two metastatic vertebrae involved (OR: 6.1, 95%
CI: 2.5–15.1, p!.001). Among the patients who developed MSCC, the median survival time was
4.4 months (95% CI: 1.5–7.3) and 4.7 months (95% CI: 3.5–5.9) in the patients without MSCC,
not being a statistically significant difference (p5.19). After the occurrence of the MSCC, the me dian survival time was 2.8 months (95% CI: 1.4–4.1).
CONCLUSIONS: In this study, a high incidence of MSCC was observed in patients with BM. The
study suggests that patients with three or more involved vertebrae per metastasis are more likely to
develop MSCC. No alteration in the overall survival time was noticed among the patients with or
without MSCC.
Description
p. 1263-1269.: il. p&b.
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Citation
SILVA, Gustavo Telles da; BERGMANN, Anke; THULER, Luiz Claudio Santos. Incidence, associated factors, and survival in metastatic spinal cord compression secondary to lung cancer. The Spine Journal, v. 15, p. 1263-1269, 2015.