Abstract

248 Background: Spinal cord compression (SCC) is one of the most debilitating conditions in metastatic prostate cancer patients (pts). A comprehensive analysis of pts could shed lights on predisposing factors and help with devising new ways for early detection and prompt treatment. Methods: 52 pts with magnetic resonance imaging-confirmed metastatic SCC from prostate cancer were identified at MD Anderson Cancer Center. Characteristics including age, anatomical site, Gleason score, overall survival(OS), time to diagnosis of SCC, underlying gene mutations, numbers of bone metastasis, number of lines of treatment and clinical outcome were analyzed. Results: 96.15% of SCC occurred in thoracic spine in comparison to 74% as reported previously. At the time of diagnosis of SCC, median age is 70 years, median OS is 1537 days, median time to development of SCC is 1222.5 days, median lines of systemic treatment is 4, median PSA value is 66.4, 100% of pts have a Gleason score above 7, 94% of pts have >4 bone metastasis, roughly 20% of pts had visceral metastases. 55% of 9 evaluable pts harbored P53 gene mutation. About 80% of pts received radiation treatment; 17% of pts received surgery; 49% of pts had fair clinical outcome after treatment (Table). Conclusions: The observed predominance of SCC in thoracic spine (96.15%) suggests an underlying mechanism governing development of SCC in preferential sites. Further research to define this mechanism will help with prevention, detection and treatment of SCC. Additionally, characterized potential predictive factors (Gleason score≥7, >4 bone mets, presence of P53 mutation) could be used to develop an algorithm to improve the management of SCC.[Table: see text]

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