A Revised Scoring System for Preoperative Evaluation of Metastatic Spine Tumor Prognosis
Abstract
To evaluate the accuracy of a revised scoring system predicting metastatic spinal tumor prognosis and the suitability of the subsequent treatment strategy. SUMMARY OF THE BACKGROUND DATA: We used a scoring system for the preoperative evaluation of the prognosis of metastatic spinal tumors and selected treatment methods for the predicted prognosis. In the previous version of our scoring system, the reliability of the predicting prognosis was 63.3% in 128 patients with metastatic spinal tumors.
The study participants were 164 patients who died after surgery and 82 who died after conservative treatment. Six parameters were used in the revised scoring system. Each parameter ranged from 0 to 5 points, and the total score was 15 points. In principle, conservative treatment or palliative procedures were indicated in patients with a total score of 8 or less (predicted survival period, less than 6 months) or those with multiple vertebral metastases, while excisional procedures were performed in patients with a total score of 12 or more (predicted survival period, 1 year or more) or those with a total score of 9 to 11 (predicted survival period, 6 months or more) and with metastasis in a single vertebra. The selection of treatment modality was followed faithfully according to the criteria of the revised scoring system after 1998. The prognosis predicted by the revised scoring system and the actual survival period after treatment were compared, and the reliability of the prognostic criteria was analyzed for the group subjected to it prospectively after 1998 (n = 118) and for all 246 patients it was applied to retrospectively.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 10
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Scoring system
- Surgery
- Metastasis
- Vertebra
- Survival analysis
- Internal medicine
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being