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Balloon Kyphoplasty is an alternative to vertebroplasty in the treatment of painful malignant vertebral fractures. This is a mini-invasive percutaneous treatment, aiming to stabilize the vertebral fracture, decrease of pain. This technique also improves patient function. Namely, bedridden patients are often able to resume walking in the days following vertebral cement injection. Advantage of Balloon Kyphoplasty as compared to vertebroplasty is the ability to inject the cement into the diseased vertebral body which shows cortical destruction with lower pressure, thereby possibly reducing cement leakage and related complications.
This is a multicentric, observational prospective study. Patients are evaluated before and after the procedure.
Sixty women or men older than 18 years, with 1 to 3 painful vertebral fracture(s) of malignant origin (due to multiple myeloma or osteolytic vertebral metastasis) will be enrolled. Each patient will be followed during 1 year after the procedure with 7 visits at D-8, D-1, D1, D15, D90, D180, and D360 or until the death of the patient.
The main evaluation outcome is patient self-global satisfaction regarding the procedure on a semi-quantitative satisfaction scale, 15 days after the Balloon Kyphoplasty.
Full description
Vertebral compression fractures (VCF) represent an important source of morbidity in patients presenting osteolytic metastatic or myelomatous vertebral involvement. In addition, cancer treatments may induce osteoporosis with an additional risk of vertebral fractures.
The two balloons (one on each side) should ideally be centered at middle height between the superior and inferior endplates and in the anterior two-thirds of the vertebral body. Balloon placement into the vertebral body is checked using radiopaque markers at the two extremities of the balloon. Once inserted, the balloons are inflated using visual, volume and pressure control to create a cavity. Inflation is stopped when one of the following inflation endpoints is reached: pressure raised over 400 psi, balloon contacts one of the cortical bone of the vertebra or reaching maximal balloon inflation volume. The balloons are then deflated and removed. The mean balloon inflation volume is 2 to 3ml. The Bone Filler Device, filled before with 1.5 ml of PMMA, is then advanced through the working cannula towards the anterior part of the cavity and cement is slowly extruded by a stainless steel stylet, acting as a plunger. When the amount of cement from the first Bone Filler Device is delivered in the cavity, it is removed and another Bone Filler Device is advanced through the working cannula. This step is repeated till a complete fill of the cavity is obtained. The same procedure is repeated through the other working cannula at the contra-lateral pedicle. Filling of the cavity with highly viscous PMMA is performed under continuous fluoroscopic control.
The aim of this study is to quantify the analgesic and patient function improvement of Balloon Kyphoplasty together with complication types and rate in patients with malignant vertebral fractures due to metastatic disease or multiple myeloma.
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Inclusion criteria
Male or female, 18 years or older
1 to 3 vertebral compression fracture(s), between T5-L5, responding to the following criteria:
The pain related to the fractured vertebrae is the more prevalent
More than 3 months life expectancy.
Blood Platelets rate more than or equal to 50 000/mm3 within the week before balloon kyphoplasty procedure (after a correct blood transfusion).
Patient must have signed a consent form.
Patient affiliated to social security
Exclusion criteria
Patient younger than 18
Impossibility to perform Balloon Kyphoplasty:
More than three symptomatic vertebral compression fractures in the same vertebral segment.
Patient receiving additional local treatment within 15 days after balloon kyphoplasty procedure (surgery, radiofrequency, radiotherapy).
Patient with primary bone tumors (eg : osteosarcoma) or single solitary plasmocytoma (patients presenting those tumors on other parts of the body, other than VCF are eligible).
Patients presenting sclerotic or mixed vertebral lesions(sclerotic vertebral lesions at another vertebral level are not a contraindication).
Patients with less than 3 month life expectancy
Patient undergoing an experimental anti-cancerous treatment in Phase I evaluated at the same time
Patient having relevant co-morbidities which may interfere with the data management on pain and quality of life.
Patient presenting an inadequate vertebra with Balloon Kyphoplasty.
Patient undergoing an additional treatment other than balloon kyphoplasty for their vertebral fracture.
Patient presenting neurological signs or spinal cord compression or spinal canal narrowing requiring surgical decompression;
Patient with a medical or surgical condition not compatible with balloon kyphoplasty procedure (eg : a non-treated local infection)
Patient having an allergy to the bone cement and/or to the contrast media used during the balloon kyphoplasty procedure.
Pregnant or breast feeding women
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60 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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