The purpose of this study is to identify potential risk factors for and determine the rate of pathological fracture for patients which having spine metastases from breast cancer and be defined as potentially unstable (SINS 7-12) according to the Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS). The investigators' analysis will provide robust data about the development of spinal instability and help identify the optimal timing of local surgery treatment.
Considering the concept of spinal instability remains important in the clinical decision-making process for patients with spine metastases, the Spine Oncology Study Group (SOSG) devised an 18-point SINS, which proved reliable and has been widely used in clinical practice. Scores of 0-6, 7-12, 13-18 are considered stable, potentially unstable, and unstable, respectively. Lesions with a low SINS (score 0-6) do not requires surgical interventions, whereas a high SINS (score 13-18) predicts the need for surgical stabilization to restore spinal stability. However, treatment strategy of intermediate SINS (score 7-12) lesions remains ambiguous owing to the uncertainty of spinal stability. With the duration of spinal metastases, some potentially unstable lesions turn to be stable while some turn to be unstable, and several factors such as tumor involvement for vertebral body, radiotherapy may account for different outcomes. Owing to the relatively weaker growth and invasion ability of breast cancer cells compared to other solid tumors such as lung cancer and liver cancer, patients with breast cancer and spinal metastases have longer life expectancy. Reasonable and prompt local surgical intervention to restore spinal stability can achieve pain relief and better quality of life effectively. Moreover, most spinal metastases from breast cancer show lytic or mixed lytic-blastic bone lesions, which exacerbates the spinal stability and results in pathological fracture. Thus, investigators focus on patients which having spinal metastases from breast cancer and an intermediate SINS (score 7-12) to explore the rate of pathological fracture and relevant risk factors. This study will help spine surgeon to identify who could benefit from a prophylactic stabilization procedure with high risk of pathological fracture and when is the best timing of surgery.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
Ruijin Hospital Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
Shanghai, Shanghai Municipality, China
RECRUITINGRate of the pathological fracture of spine
Pathological fracture will be detected using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years
Quality of life outcomes measured by EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire
Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years
Quality of life outcomes measured by EORTC QLQ-BM22 questionnaire
Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years
Pain and functional outcome data measured by Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) questionnaire
Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years
Spinal stability measured by Spinal Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS)
The Spine Instability Neoplastic Score (SINS) is a comprehensive classification system that can aid in predicting spine stability of neoplastic lesions. The 18-point SINS includes global spinal location of the tumor (score 0-3), type and presence of pain (score 0-3), bone lesion quality (score 0-2), spinal alignment (score 0-4), extent of vertebral body collapse (score 0-3), and posterolateral spinal element involvement (score 0-3). As the SINS increases, the spine stability of neoplastic lesions turns to be worse
Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years
Neurologic outcome measured by Frankel grading system
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Time frame: First diagnosis of spinal metastases, every 3 months in the first year after diagnosis, every 6 months after one year after diagnosis. Up to 2 years