View clinical trials related to Vertebral Metastasis.
Filter by:Perspective observational cohort study in which the data relating to patients affected by one or more vertebral metastases or by vertebral localization of hemolifoproliferative malact and surgical treatment candidates will be collected, which will be recruited at the Complex Structure of Spine Surgery for Oncological and Degenerative Rizzoli Orthopedic Institute starting from the date of approval of the same study. Patients of both sexes and aged 18 years or older will be included. Patients with primary (benign or malignant) tumors of the vertebrae and patients unable to consent to the study will be excluded from the study. For each patient, in addition to the demographic data, preoperative information will be collected: type of tumor, involved vertebral levels, presence of pathological fracture, presence of visceral metastases, presence and number of other bone metastases, neurological picture according to Frankel's scale, evaluated pain according to the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), functional status according to Karnofsky, EuroQoL-5D and SF-36 questionnaires on the quality of life; information related to the intervention itself: access, type of surgical treatment, possible preoperative embolization; intraoperative complications; information at discharge: postoperative complications, pain, neurological picture, functional status; follow-up data: pain, neurological picture, functional status, SF-36 questionnaire, late complications, local recurrence; systemic progression of the disease. Follow-up checks will be performed at 3 months, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, 24 and 36 months. The timing of the controls and the examinations requested by the patients will be those of normal clinical practice. Primary endpoint is the change in quality of life (measured by scores EQ-5D and SF-36) and pain (measured using the VAS score) following surgery compared to pre-operative values.
SPINERY is a Radiofrequency (RF) device designed for palliative treatment of patients with painful metastatic bone tumors involving vertebral bodies, sacrum, iliac crest and peri-acetabulum. In particular, SPINERY is conceived for pain reduction in patients affected by metastatic bone tumors involving the vertebral bodies, sacrum, iliac crest and periacetabulum, in patients with indication for Standard Therapy and in patients who have failed, not candidates or refuse Standard Therapy. Primary objective of the SPARTA Study is to demonstrate that SPINERY RF device is effective in short-term (3 months) pain reduction in patients affected by metastatic bone tumors and to demonstrate that SPINERY RF device is safe in the RF ablation treatment of metastatic bone tumors, without causing device-related adverse events including, in particular, nerve injury. Primary objective hypothesis will be obtained with Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) scale performance questionnaire in terms of palliative treatment. Change of Worst Pain Score expressed as average reduction of 2 BPI (Brief Pain Inventory) scores will be calculated as: μc = worst-pain 3-month - worst-pain baseline A negative average value for change in pain represents a lowering of the subject's pain score (an improvement, or reduction in pain) and a positive value represents an increase in the subject's pain score (a worsening or increase in pain). Worst pain score at the target treatment site will be collected from the BPI in the past 24 hours.
Hypo-fractured radiotherapy in stereotactic conditions (RSHF) of bone metastases allows high doses to be delivered to the affected bone segment while sparing adjacent healthy tissues as well as possible. In addition, it not only reduces pain and prevents spinal cord compression, but also improves long-term control of metastatic disease. Zoledronic acid reduces bone complications. The economic literature shows that stereotactic radiotherapy, like zoledronic acid, are cost-effective strategies in these indications. The objective of this research project is to evaluate the efficiency of adding zoledronic acid to stereotactic radiotherapy in the treatment of vertebral metastases.
The purpose of this study is to determine if Conformal High Dose Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy is an appropriate option for treating cancer that has spread to the spinal column. This study involves patients who have been diagnosed with metastatic cancer to the thoracic and lumbar vertebral body levels and currently do not have symptoms caused from the area of concern. The goal is to prove that this is not only a safe form of treatment, but that Conformal High Dose Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy can reduce the risk of cancer coming back in the area that the investigators treat which may reduce the risk of developing symptoms like pain in the future.
The purpose of this study is to determine pain control rate (Percentage of patients in each arm that achieve pain control) at the treated site(s) at 1 month, 2-4 months and 5-6 months post-treatment.
The study aims to evaluate if adding vertebroplasty to radiotherapy, in the treatment of spine metastasis from breast and prostate cancer, is preferable to radiotherapy alone. The investigators hypothesize that, by combining vertebral augmentation with cement and radiotherapy, they could achieve an enhancement in pain relief and level of activities, as well as a decrease in the side effects of multiple medications used for pain control.