Surgical management of spinal osteoblastomas Journal Article


Authors: Versteeg, A. L.; Dea, N.; Boriani, S.; Varga, P. P.; Luzzati, A.; Fehlings, M. G.; Bilsky, M. H.; Rhines, L. D.; Reynolds, J. J.; Dekutosk, Mar; Gokaslan, Z. L.; Germscheid, N. M.; Fisher, C. G.; the AOSpine Knowledge Forum Tumor
Article Title: Surgical management of spinal osteoblastomas
Abstract: OBJECTIVE Osteoblastoma is a rare primary benign bone tumor with a predilection for the spinal column. Although of benign origin, osteoblastomas tend to behave more aggressively clinically than other benign tumors. Because of the low incidence of osteoblastomas, evidence-based treatment guidelines and high-quality research are lacking, which has resulted in inconsistent treatment. The goal of this study was to determine whether application of the Enneking classification in the management of spinal osteoblastomas influences local recurrence and survival time. METHODS A multicenter database of patients who underwent surgical intervention for spinal osteoblastoma was developed by the AOSpine Knowledge Forum Tumor. Patient data pertaining to demographics, diagnosis, treatment, crosssectional survival, and local recurrence were collected. Patients in 2 cohorts, based on the Enneking classification of the tumor (Enneking appropriate [EA] and Enneking inappropriate [EI]), were analyzed. If the final pathology margin matched the Enneking-recommended surgical margin, the tumor was classified as EA; if not, it was classified as EI. RESULTS A total of 102 patients diagnosed with a spinal osteoblastoma were identified between November 1991 and June 2012. Twenty-nine patients were omitted from the analysis because of short follow-up time, incomplete survival data, or invalid staging, which left 73 patients for the final analysis. Thirteen (18%) patients suffered a local recurrence, and 6 (8%) patients died during the study period. Local recurrence was strongly associated with mortality (relative risk 9.2; p = 0.008). When adjusted for Enneking appropriateness, this result was not altered significantly. No significant differences were found between the EA and EI groups in regard to local recurrence and mortality. CONCLUSIONS In this evaluation of the largest multicenter cohort of spinal osteoblastomas, local recurrence was found to be strongly associated with mortality. Application of the Enneking classification as a treatment guide for preventing local recurrence was not validated. © AANS, 2017.
Keywords: survival; adult; cancer survival; human tissue; treatment outcome; aged; cancer surgery; primary tumor; survival rate; retrospective studies; young adult; major clinical study; clinical trial; histopathology; mortality; conference paper; cancer adjuvant therapy; cancer patient; postoperative care; cancer staging; follow up; follow-up studies; prospective study; prospective studies; demography; cohort studies; neoplasm recurrence, local; classification; cohort analysis; retrospective study; cancer mortality; time factors; cause of death; survival time; multicenter study; tumor recurrence; spinal neoplasms; prognostic factors; patient coding; cross-sectional study; cross-sectional studies; kaplan meier method; factual database; databases, factual; tumor classification; tumor diagnosis; spine surgery; spine tumor; surgical margin; surgical treatment; local recurrence; kaplan-meier estimate; osteoblastoma; time factor; cancer prognosis; humans; human; male; female; primary spine tumor; mortality risk; enneking classification; spinal oncology
Journal Title: Journal of Neurosurgery: Spine
Volume: 27
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1547-5654
Publisher: American Association of Neurological Surgeons  
Date Published: 2017-09-01
Start Page: 321
End Page: 327
Language: English
DOI: 10.3171/2017.1.spine16788
PUBMED: 28686147
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Conference Paper -- Export Date: 2 October 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Mark H Bilsky
    319 Bilsky