Abstract
Abstract: It is known that the treatment of intra or extraspinal paediatric tumours with surgery and radiotherapy or radiotherapy alone can lead to the onset of progressive spinal deformity the management of which can be extremely challenging. We review our series of patients who have developed a spinal deformity in these circumstances.
Methods: A review of all patients seen between 1996 and 2007 in the spinal department who have developed a significant spinal deformity following treatment for an intra or extra spinal tumour.
Results: 14 patients were identified. The age of presentation to the spinal service was between 2 years 6 months and 15 years 3 months. The underlying diagnoses were Wilms Tumour treated with surgery and radiotherapy in 3, 1 extraspinal sarcoma treated with surgical resection, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, 1 extraspinal neuro-blastoma treated with surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and stem cell rescue and 9 intra spinal tumours (PNET, astrocytoma, ganglioneuroblastoma and der-moid) all managed with resection with or without radiotherapy. The spinal deformities that have developed were thoracic kyphoscoliosis, thoracolumbar kyphosis and lumber hyperlordosis. The spinal management of these deformities has been conservative in 12 with regular assessment to allow intervention if indicated. 2 patients have undergone surgery, a vascularised fibular strut graft and anterior instrumentation in 1 and a non vascularised rib graft in 1 for progressive deformity felt to lead to neurological dysfunction or lung hypoplasia. The cases managed operatively were complicated by poor posterior soft tissues following previous surgery and radiotherapy requiring an anterior approach. In all patients who were treated with radiotherapy platyspondyly was always seen in the vertebral bodies anteriorly and this corresponded to the apex of the deformity.
Conclusion: In all children who undergo spinal surgery and or radiotherapy for paediatric tumours there must be ongoing surveillance for the development of a spinal deformity. We feel that this is as much a result of anterior growth arrest secondary to radiotherapy as to posterior laminectomy for intra canal tumour excision. The surgical management of this problem is complex and may require innovative solutions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Sue Woordward, Britspine Secretariat, 9 Linsdale Gardens, Gedling, Nottingham NG4 4GY, England. Email: sue.britspine@hotmail.com