• Ugeskrift for laeger · Sep 1996

    [Metastatic spinal cord compression in patients with lung cancer].

    • F Bach, N Agerlin, J B Sørensen, T Bøge-Rasmussen, P Dombernowsky, P S Sørensen, and H H Hansen.
    • Onkologisk afdeling R, Amtssygehuset i Herley.
    • Ugeskr. Laeg. 1996 Sep 30; 158 (40): 5606-10.

    AbstractMetastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC) is a disabling complication to cancer for which the optimal treatment of choice is not settled. An analysis was performed in patients with MSCC secondary to lung cancer in order to elucidate clinical symptoms and treatment results according to regression of neurological deficits and survival. The total series consisted of 102 retrospectively evaluated patients referred for treatment, in the Eastern part of Denmark in the period 1979-1988. Patients included 40% cases with Small Cell Carcinoma (SCLC), Adeno-carcinoma (ACL) (26%), Squamous Cell Carcinoma (SQLC) (18%) and Large Cell Carcinoma (LCC) (9%). Symptoms, clinical presentations and therapeutic results are described. The outcome of treatment depended fundamentally on the patient's neurological condition at the time of the diagnosis. All patients with SCLC who were able to walk at the time of MSCC remained ambulatory while 15% of the non-ambulatory SCLC patients regained walking ability; in non-SCLC, 95% of patients retained walking ability while 22% regained the ability to walk. No major differences in the immediate outcome of treatment between the various histological types of lung cancer as to the different treatment modalities were observed, however, 82% of the patients with non-SCLC had benefit from treatment with laminectomy followed by radiotherapy compared with either laminectomy (47%) or radiotherapy (39%) alone (p = .03, Chi-square test). The group of patients treated with laminectomy followed by radiotherapy had a better survival (median value 3.5 months, range 0-132 months) than patients treated with either laminectomy (median value 1.5 months, range 0-32 months) or radiotherapy (median value 1 month, range 0-59 months) alone (p = .03, Log-Rank test). No significant difference was observed in survival between the various histological types of lung cancer (p = .18, Log-Rank test). Despite a short survival, early diagnosis and immediate treatment is crucial, since it may preserve the gait function in 97% of lung cancer patients developing malignant spinal cord compression.

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