Abstract

PurposeThe spine is the most common site of bone metastasis from cancer and can be divided into 5 locational subsections, varying in mobility. The purpose of this research was to determine if the mobility of the metastases-bearing vertebral segment influenced pre-treatment pain intensity or health-related quality of life (HR-QoL) for patients about to receive palliative radiation therapy for painful spine metastasis. MethodsThis study was a retrospective chart review of patients referred to the Palliative Radiation Oncology Program, about to receive radiation therapy for vertebral metastasis between January 2014 and June 2016. The main variables included patient-reported Edmonton Symptom Assessment Score pain intensity, the EQ-5D score for HR-QoL and the location of the vertebral metastasis (categorized using the SINS mobility score (mobile, junctional, semi-rigid, or rigid)). Various patient, disease and treatment characteristics were also collected, and entered into a multivariate analysis. ResultsThe eligible sample included 196 patients. Spinal metastases were distributed with approximately equal frequency (~27%) between the junctional, mobile and semi-rigid spine segments. Rigid spine was the least common site for spinal metastases (19%). Patients with metastatic disease in the mobile spine regions experienced greater pre-treatment pain compared to patients with disease in junctional subsections (Odds Ratio [OR] 1.37; p0.012). No relationship between HR-QOL and spinal mobility was found. Multivariate analysis also revealed that spinal metastases from a primary lung diagnosis reported worse pre-treatment pain compared to those from genitourinary cancers (OR 1.15; p0.05). Only age significantly influenced HR-QoL (75–95yrs vs. 35–55yrs; p0.041). ConclusionsPatients referred to an RT clinic for the treatment of painful spinal metastases have a different distribution of disease throughout the spine compared to those referred for surgery or SBRT. Those with metastases in mobile spine segments were more likely to experience severe pre-treatment pain than those with metastases in junctional segments. Although further corroboration is needed, our results suggest that the mobility of the metastasis-bearing spinal section could be added to the existing list of predictors that aid clinicians in identifying patients that will benefit from closer follow-up or early intervention.

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