Abstract

Group patients who required open surgery for metastatic breast cancer to the spine by functional level and metastatic disease characteristics to identify factors that predispose to poor outcomes. A retrospective analysis included patients managed at 2 tertiary referral centers from 2008 to 2020. The primary outcome was a 90-day adverse event. A 2-step unsupervised cluster analysis stratified patients into cohorts using function at presentation, preoperative spine radiation, structural instability, epidural spinal cord compression (ESCC), neural deficits, and tumor location/hormone status. Comparisons were performed using χ2 test and one-way analysis of variance. Five patient "clusters" were identified. High function (HIGH) had thoracic metastases and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) score of 1.0±0.8. Low function/irradiated (LOW+RADS) had preoperative radiation and the lowest Karnofsky scores (56.0±10.6). Estrogen receptor or progesterone receptor (ER/PR) positive patients had >90% estrogen/progesterone positivity and moderate Karnofsky scores (74.0±11.5). Lumbar/noncompressive (NON-COMP) had the fewest patients with ESCC grade 2 or 3 epidural disease (42.1%, P < 0.001). Low function/neurologic deficits (LOW+NEURO) had ESCC grade 2 or 3 disease and neurologic deficits. Adverse event rates were 25.0% in the HIGH group, 73.3% in LOW+RADS, 24.0% in ER/PR, 31.6% in NON-COMP, and 60.0% in LOW+NEURO (P=0.003). Function at presentation, tumor hormone signature, radiation history, and epidural compression delineated postoperative trajectory. We believe our results can aid in expectation management and the identification of at-risk patients who may merit closer surveillance following surgical intervention.

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