The management of spinal metastases focuses on reducing symptoms and protecting the spinal cord, historically involving extracorporeal radiotherapy alone. The use of separation surgery techniques alongside high-dose radiotherapy to treat spinal metastases is a novel concept and has changed the treatment paradigm. Additionally, titanium implants have been increasingly used in cases of metastatic spinal tumours requiring adjuvant stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT). We present the case of a 48-year-old female patient who was diagnosed with a metastatic deposit of breast cancer within L1 with an Epidural Spinal Cord Compression score greater than 1a. At the time of the diagnosis, her prognosis was estimated to be more than two years. She underwent a posterior instrumented fusion of T11-L3 vertebrae with a carbon-fibre fixation system and separation surgery (debulking of the tumour around the spinal cord). The patient was discharged on the second postoperative day achieving complete resolution of the mechanical back pain. SBRT was performed 12 weeks after the surgery. The patient regained ECOG status of 1 shortly after but sadly passed away due to multiple brain metastases 36 months following posterior fixation. Her spinal disease remained well-controlled throughout the follow-up. Carbon-fibre implants appear to be safe and relatively easy to apply. Their use, due to limited artefacts in both computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, makes SBRT much more straightforward and follow-up imaging easier to be interpreted. Our experience demonstrates that, in conjunction with separation surgery, the translucent, low perturbing properties of these implants can improve SBRT intervention and detection of recurrence on follow-up imaging.
Keywords: breast cancer; carbon fibre implants; separation surgery; spinal metastasis; stereotactic radiosurgery.
Copyright © 2022, Galloway et al.