CT fluoroscopy-guided vertebral augmentation with a radiofrequency-induced, high-viscosity bone cement (StabiliT(®)): technical results and polymethylmethacrylate leakages in 25 patients.

Autor: Trumm CG; Department of Clinical Radiology, Klinikum der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München-Grosshadern, Marchioninistr. 15, 81377, München, Germany. christoph.trumm@med.lmu.de, Jakobs TF, Stahl R, Sandner TA, Paprottka PM, Reiser MF, Zech CJ, Hoffmann RT
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Skeletal radiology [Skeletal Radiol] 2013 Jan; Vol. 42 (1), pp. 113-20. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 Mar 16.
DOI: 10.1007/s00256-012-1386-5
Abstrakt: Objective: To assess the technical results of CT fluoroscopy-guided, radiofrequency-induced vertebral augmentation (StabiliT®) in terms of vertebral height restoration and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) leakages, occurring in 25 individual patients with vertebral compression fractures and osteolysis.
Materials and Methods: From 07/2010 to 08/2011, 25 patients (16 women, nine men; age 71 ± 14; range 41-89) with painful vertebral compression fractures due to osteoporosis (n = 19), metastases (n = 2) or multiple myeloma (n = 4) underwent vertebral augmentation with a radiofrequency-activated, high-viscosity polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) bone cement (StabiliT® Vertebral Augmentation system; DFINE Europe GmbH, Mannheim) under local anesthesia. Thirty-four vertebrae (Th5-L5) were treated in 27 sessions under CT fluoroscopy guidance (128-row CT, Somatom Definition AS, Siemens, Erlangen) using a unilateral access and a cavity-creating osteotome prior to remote-controlled, hydraulically driven cement injection. 1/2/3 levels were treated in 21/5/1 session(s). Vertebral height change in the midsagittal plane (anterior, midvertebral, posterior endplate distance) and PMMA leaks were retrospectively evaluated using the postinterventional CT.
Results: All patients were successfully treated in the first session. Mean (MV ± SD) procedure time and amount of injected PMMA were 56 ± 14 min and 4.5 ± 1.4 ml, respectively. Mean anterior/midvertebral/posterior height gain was +7.1/+9.7/+0.4%. Small local vertebral leaks were observed in 18/34 vertebrae (53%) without any clinical sequelae. No major complications occurred.
Conclusions: CT fluoroscopy-guided, RF-induced vertebral augmentation with a high-viscosity bone cement (StabiliT®) was safe and technically successful in all patients. Using a hydraulic cement injection technique, a moderate restoration of anterior and midvertebral height was seen while the system was not markedly superior to standard vertebroplasty regarding the frequency of minor asymptomatic PMMA leaks.
Databáze: MEDLINE