Abstract

Recent years have seen a paradigm shift towards total/near-total resection in spinal cord lipoma surgery. As this procedure is technically challenging, surgical candidates need to be selected appropriately through accurate image assessment and classification. The purpose of this paper is to describe a surgical series of paediatric spinal cord lipomas, their diagnosis, results and complications. We undertook a retrospective review of paediatric patients with spinal cord lipomas who underwent surgery between 2008 and 2022. The variables studied were age, gender, preoperative symptoms according to the Necker Functional Score (NFS), type of lipoma according to Morota's classification, functional and radiological surgical outcomes using the cord-sac ratio (CSR), need for re-operation, complications and follow-up. A total of 25 patients (average age 36months) underwent surgery. According to Morota's classification, MRI showed 13 type 1 lipomas, two type 2, two type 3 and eight type 4. The preoperative NFS was 16.06, with urological abnormalities being the most frequent manifestation. Total/near-total resection was attempted since 2015. Five patients with type 1 lipoma required re-operation due to clinical deterioration with suspected retethering, all of them with a CSR > 0.3. The series average CSR was 0.417. This paper highlights the importance of proper classification for a correct surgical approach to obtain favourable results and minimise possible complications. Based on our experience, given our results regarding the percentage of fistulae and retethering rates, we limited radical resection to symptomatic type 1 lipomas. Our future aim is to obtain better CSR rates and to decrease the retethering percentage.

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