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Metastatic Bone Disease and Multiple Myeloma

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1 Harrington, K. (1986). Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 68-A(7): 1110-1115. ... KyphX Introducer Tool Kit. 33. KyphX IBT Inflation. Reduces the fracture, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Metastatic Bone Disease and Multiple Myeloma


1
Metastatic Bone Disease and Multiple Myeloma
16000122-01
2
Southwest Spine Institute
  • Douglas S. Won, MD
  • Spine Surgery Specialist
  • Director of Southwest Spine Institute
  • Clinical Asst. Professor, UT Southwestern Medical
    School
  • Baylor Spine Brain Center at Irving
  • Irving Native, Graduate of MacArthur High

3
Metastases to Bone
  • Metastatic bone carcinoma
  • Originates from other cancers, such as breast,
    prostate, lung, renal cell, etc.. and spreads to
    bone
  • Metastatic cancer causes skeletal complications
    every 3-4 months1

1 Janjan, N. (2001). "Bone Metastases Approaches
to Management." Seminars in Oncology 28(4)
28-34.
4
Metastasis
  • Cancer typically spreads to1.
  • Lymphatic system
  • Lungs
  • Liver
  • Skeleton2
  • Vertebrae 75
  • Pelvis 40
  • Femur 25

1 Levesque, J et al.. A Clinical Guide to Primary
Bone Tumors. Baltimore Williams Wilkins
1988. 2 Kleerekoper, M et al. (eds.) The Bone and
Mineral Manual A Practical Guide. Academic
Press 1999.
5
Classifications
  • Osteoblastic lesions
  • Increase bone density
  • Do not change bone strength
  • Decrease bone stiffness
  • Characterized by increased bone formation
  • Example
  • Metastatic osteoblastic carcinoma

6
Metastatic Osteoblastic Carcinoma
7
Classifications
  • Osteolytic lesions
  • - Decrease both bone strength and stiffness
  • - Characterized by increased bone resorption,
    causing swiss cheese type lesions on bone
  • Examples
  • - Multiple Myeloma
  • - Metastatic osteolytic carcinoma

8
Metastatic Osteolytic Carcinoma
9
Metastases to Bone
  • Cancers that frequently metastasize to the
    skeleton include1
  • Breast cancer
  • 75 of cases
  • 65 of the lesions are lytic2
  • Lung cancer
  • 35 of cases
  • 80 of the lesions are lytic2
  • Kidney cancer
  • 25 of cases
  • 1 Kleerekoper, M. et al (eds.) The Bone and
    Mineral Manual A Practical Guide. Academic
    Press 1999.
  • 2 Mirra, J. Bone Tumors Clinical, Radiologic,
    and Pathologic Correlations. Philadelphia Lea
    Febiger 1989.

10
Metastases to the Vertebrae
  • gt 70 of patients who die from cancer have
    vertebral metastases1
  • Lytic destruction of the anterior portion of the
    vertebral body1
  • Lytic lesions are associated with higher fracture
    risk
  • Metastatic bone disease is painful2
  • Up to 2/3 of patients experience severe pain and
    disability

1 Harrington, K. (1986). Journal of Bone and
Joint Surgery 68-A(7) 1110-1115. 2 Janjan,
N. (2001). Seminars in Oncology 28(4) 28-34.
11
Fracture Risk
  • Osteolytic lesions higher fracture rate
  • Fracture probability increases with the duration
    of metastatic involvement1
  • Certain cancers almost always metastasize with
    osteolytic lesions2
  • Coleman, R. (2001). Cancer Treatment Reviews 27
    165-176.
  • 2 Mirra, J. Bone Tumors Clinical, Radiologic,
    and Pathologic Correlations. Philadelphia Lea
    Febiger 1989.

12
Biomechanics of Pathologic Spine Fractures
  • Center of gravity (CG) moves forward
  • Large bending moment created
  • Posterior muscles and ligaments must
    counterbalance increased bending
  • Anterior spine must resist larger compressive
    stresses

CG
White III and Panjabi 1990
13
Radiation Therapy
  • May leave bone unstable
  • Radiation may increase risk of fracture1
  • Up to 41 of patients who undergo radiation
    experience bone fractures
  • Cannot correct an anatomic abnormality such as a
    fracture2
  • 1 Patel, B. and H. DeGroot III (2001).
    Orthopedics 24(6) 612-7.
  • 2 Janjan, N. (2001). Seminars in Oncology 28(4)
    28-34.

14
Fracture Treatment
  • Pain is due to spinal instability
  • radiotherapy or systemic treatment will not
    relieve the pain1
  • Stabilization is required for pain relief1
  • Spinal cord involvement and neurologic deficit
    possible if not stabilized2
  • Coleman, R. (2001). Cancer Treatment Reviews 27
    165-176.
  • 2 Harrington, K. (1986). Journal of Bone and
    Joint Surgery 68-A(7) 1110-1115.

15
Multiple Myeloma
Myeloma cells
Picture courtesy of the International Myeloma
Foundation
16
Multiple Myeloma
  • Cancer of the bone marrow
  • 75,000 100,000 patients in the US at any one
    time
  • Over 13,500 new cases diagnosed each year in the
    US
  • Male to female ratio is 32
  • Trend towards patients under the age of 55

From Multiple Myeloma Cancer of the Bone
Marrow. International Myeloma Foundation, 2001
edition.
17
Multiple Myeloma
  • Disruption of bone marrow function
  • Suppression of immune function
  • Osteoclasts activated
  • Osteoblasts inhibited
  • Hallmark is osteolytic lesions

Picture courtesy of the International Myeloma
Foundation
18
Common Sites for Bone Involvement
  • Skull
  • Spine
  • Pelvis
  • Long bones

Picture courtesy of the International Myeloma
Foundation
19
T-10 fracture due to multiple myeloma
Photo courtesy of Steve James, M.D.
20
T2 weighted MRI showing myeloma related fracture
at L3 and L4
21
Vertebral BodyCompressionFractureTreatment
Options
16000040-02
22
ORTHOPEDIC FRACTURE CARE
Why have we been content to leave the spine in a
physiologically and biomechanically compromised
condition?
23
Fracture Treatment Objectives
  • Four AO principles1
  • Fracture reduction and fixation to restore
    anatomical relationships
  • Stability by fixation or splintage, as the nature
    of the fracture and the injury requires
  • Preservation of blood supply to soft tissues and
    bone by careful handling and gentle reduction
    techniques
  • Early and safe mobilization of the part and the
    patient

Arbeitsgemeinschaft Osteosynthesefragen (English
translation Association for the Study of
Internal Fixation - ASIF) 1 Ruedi Murphy, AO
Principles of Fracture Management, Thieme,
Stuttgart, New York, 2000
24
Vertebral Body Compression Fracture (VCF)
Depressed endplate(s)
Spine shorter, tilted forward
Wedge- shaped
Normal
Fractured
25
Deformity Progression
16º kyphosis
25º kyphosis
Lieberman et al., Spine 2001
26
VCF Treatment Options
  • Medical Management
  • Treatment Protocol
  • Bed rest
  • Narcotic analgesics
  • Braces
  • Shortcomings
  • May fail to relieve pain
  • Does not provide long-term functional improvement
  • May exacerbate bone loss
  • Does not attempt to restore the anatomy

27
VCF Treatment Options
  • Open Surgical Treatment
  • Indication
  • Only if neurologic deficit (very rare, only
    0.05)
  • Instrumented fusion, anterior or posterior
  • Shortcomings
  • Invasive
  • Poor outcomes in osteopenic bone

28
VCF Treatment Options
  • Vertebroplasty
  • Designed to stabilize painful VCFs
  • Shortcomings
  • Risk of filler leaks (27-74 reported1,2,4,5,6,7,8
    ,9,10)
  • High pressure injection
  • Uncontrolled fill
  • High complication rate (1-20 reported3,4,5)
  • Freezes spinal deformity
  • Does not reduce fracture or restore anatomy
  • Not designed to reposition bone

1 Cortet et al., J Rheum 1999 5 Jensen et al.,
AJNR 1997 8 Grados et al., Rheumatology 2000 2
Alvarez et al., Eurospine 2001 6 Cotten et al.
Radiology 1996 9 Peh et al., Radiology
2002 3Padovani et al., AJNR 1997 7 Gaughen et
al., AJNR 2002 10 Ryu et al., J Neurosurgery
2002 4 Weill et al., Radiology 1996
29
Why Fracture Reduction?
  • What is orthopedic reduction?
  • The restoration, by surgical or manipulative
    procedures, of a part to its normal anatomical
    relation1
  • What is the goal?
  • To produce optimal outcomes with early diagnosis
    and treatment2
  • To accommodate the frail physical status and
    co-morbidities of geriatric patients2

1 Stedmans Concise Medical Dictionary. 1997.
Williams and Wilkins. 2 Brakoniecki, Anesthetic
Management of the Trauma Patient with Skeletal
Injuries, Skeletal Trauma, W.B. Saunders Company,
1998, 17171-172
30
New VCF Treatment Option
Minimally Invasive Fracture Reduction
31
Minimally Invasive Fracture Reduction
  • KyphX Inflatable Bone Tamp (IBT)
  • For use as a conventional bone tamp for the
    reduction of fractures and/or creation of a void
    in cancellous bone in the spine, hand, tibia,
    radius and calcaneus.

32
KyphX Introducer Tool Kit
Allows precise, minimally invasive access to the
vertebral body and provides a working channel
33
KyphX IBT Inflation
Reduces the fracture, compacts the bone, and may
elevate the endplates
34
KyphX IBT Removal
Leaves a defined cavity within the vertebral body
35
Minimally Invasive Fracture Reduction Clinical
Experience
  • Over 3 years of orthopedic fracture reduction
  • As of June 30, 2002
  • Fractures reduced gt 22,000
  • Patients gt 17,000

36
Minimally Invasive Fracture Reduction
KyphX Inflatable Bone Tamp has been developed
for patients with symptomatic VCFs
37
Possible causes of VCFs
  • Primary osteoporosis
  • Secondary osteoporosis
  • Drug-induced (corticosteroids, tobacco,
    barbituates, heparin)
  • Endocrine (hyperparathyroidism, diabetes)
  • Miscellaneous (renal failure, COPD, rheumatoid
    arthritits, hepatic disease or transplant)

Merck Manual, 16th ed., 1992
38
Possible causes of VCFs
  • Osteolytic lesions
  • Multiple Myeloma
  • Bone metastases
  • Pagets disease
  • Trauma
  • ½ of all trauma cases are misclassified

39
Summary
  • The general goal for fracture treatment is
    restoration of anatomy and early return to
    function
  • Conventional therapy not always effective
  • KyphX IBT is a new option for VCFs designed to
  • reduce the fracture
  • move cancellous bone (elevate endplates)
  • create void inside vertebral body
  • As with hip fracture surgery, early diagnosis and
    intervention are important for fracture reduction

40
Case Study
Patient 55 YO MaleDiagnosis Multiple
Myeloma Fracture Reduced L-1, 3 day old
41
Case Study
Patient 61 YO Female Diagnosis Multiple
MyelomaFracture Reduced T11-L2, 1 ½ yrs old
42
Case Study
Patient 61 YO MaleDiagnosis Multiple
MyelomaFracture Reduced T-11, 5 weeks o
43
Southwest Spine Institute
  • 2120 N. MacArthur Blvd
  • Irving
  • 2200 Morriss Rd. 100
  • Flower Mound
  • 200 Pecan Creek Dr., Southlake
  • www.SwSpineInst.com 972-438-4636

44
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