• Eur Spine J · Oct 2000

    Vertebral body replacement with a bioglass-polyurethane composite in spine metastases--clinical, radiological and biomechanical results.

    • M Schulte, M Schultheiss, E Hartwig, H J Wilke, S Wolf, R Sokiranski, T Fleiter, L Kinzl, and L Claes.
    • Department of Trauma, Hand and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Ulm, Germany. Michael.schulte@medizin.uni-ulm.de
    • Eur Spine J. 2000 Oct 1; 9 (5): 437-44.

    AbstractMetastatic spine lesions frequently require corpectomy in order to achieve decompression of the spinal cord and restoration of spinal stability. A variety of systems have been developed for vertebral body replacement. In patients with prolonged life expectancy due to an improvement of both systemic and local therapy, treatment results can be impaired by a loosening at the implant-bone interface or mechanical failure. Furthermore, early detection of a metastatic recurrence using sensitive imaging modalities like computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is possible in these patients without artefact interference. The aim of our pilot study was to evaluate the clinical applicability and results of a new radiolucent system for vertebral body replacement in the lumbar spine. The system consists of bone-integrating biocompatible materials - a polyetherurethane/bioglass composite (PU-C) replacement body and an integrated plate of carbon-fibre reinforced polyetheretherketone (CF-PEEK) - and provides high primary stability with anterior instrumentation alone. In a current prospective study, five patients with metastatic lesions of the lumbar spine were treated by corpectomy and reconstruction using this new system. Good primary stability was achieved in all cases. Follow-up (median 15 months) using CT and MRI revealed progressive osseous integration of the PU-C spacer in four patients surviving more than 6 months. Results obtained from imaging methods were confirmed following autopsy by biomechanical investigation of an explanted device. From these data, it can be concluded that implantation of the new radiolucent system provides sufficient long-term stability for the requirements of selected tumour patients with improved prognosis.

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