Spinal Cord Compression Secondary to Prostate Carcinoma: Treatment and Prognosis
1993
AbstractOf 35 patients with prostate carcinoma and suspected spinal cord compression 26 (74%) had myelograms and/or magnetic resonance imaging studies demonstrating epidural spinal cord compression. In 5 of 26 patients (19%) spinal cord compression was the first indication of prostate cancer. All patients were initially treated with radiation, steroids and androgen deprivation therapy. Three patients underwent laminectomy. Of 12 patients (100%) ambulatory at presentation 12 remained ambulatory. Of 12 patients (83%) who were paraparetic at presentation 10 were ambulatory after treatment. However, 2 of these patients subsequently had recurrent compression and became paraplegic. Overall, 7 of 26 patients (27%) had recurrent compression. Of 5 patients who either presented with paraplegia or in whom paraplegia developed secondary to recurrent spinal cord compression 4 remained paraplegic despite treatment. The average survival of these 5 patients after treatment was 3.9 months versus 18 months for the group as...
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