Cancers (Feb 2024)

Leiomyogenic Tumor of the Spine: A Systematic Review

  • Abdurrahman F. Kharbat,
  • Kishore Balasubramanian,
  • Kiran Sankarappan,
  • Ryan D. Morgan,
  • Khawaja M. Hassan,
  • Paolo Palmisciano,
  • Panayiotis E. Pelargos,
  • Michael Chukwu,
  • Othman Bin Alamer,
  • Ali S. Haider,
  • Tarek Y. El Ahmadieh,
  • John F. Burke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16040748
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. 748

Abstract

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The study cohort consisted of 83 patients with a mean age of 49.55 (SD 13.72) with a female preponderance (60 patients). Here, 32.14% of patients had primary LTS; the remaining were metastases. Clinical presentation included nonspecific back pain (57.83%), weakness (21.69%) and radicular pain (18.07%). History of uterine neoplasia was found in 33.73% of patients. LTS preferentially affected the thoracic spine (51.81%), followed by the lumbar (21.67%) spine. MRI alone was the most common imaging modality (33.33%); in other cases, it was used with CT (22.92%) or X-ray (16.67%); 19.23% of patients had Resection/Fixation, 15.38% had Total en bloc spondylectomy, and 10.26% had Corpectomy. A minority of patients had laminectomy and decompression. Among those with resection, 45.83% had a gross total resection, 29.17% had a subtotal resection, and 16.67% had a near total resection. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated positivity for actin (43.37%), desmin (31.33%), and Ki67 (25.30). At a follow-up of 19.3 months, 61.97% of patients were alive; 26.25% of 80 patients received no additional treatment, 23.75% received combination radiotherapy and chemotherapy, only chemotherapy was given to 20%, and radiotherapy was given to 17.5%. Few (2.5%) had further resection. For an average of 12.50 months, 42.31% had no symptoms, while others had residual (19.23%), other metastasis (15.38%), and pain (7.69%). On follow-up of 29 patients, most (68.97%) had resolved symptoms; 61.97% of the 71 patients followed were alive.

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