2 The condition, current treatments and procedure

2 The condition, current treatments and procedure

The condition

2.1 Spinal metastases can affect quality of life by causing severe pain, functional impairment, vertebral fractures, nerve root impingement, spinal cord compression and hypercalcaemia.

Current treatments

2.2 Treatment for spinal metastases is always palliative. It aims to reduce pain, improve and maintain function, provide mechanical stability, and prevent further local tumour progression. Current treatment options include a combination of medical therapies (such as analgesics, systemic therapies including osteoclastic inhibitors such as bisphosphonates and denosumab, chemotherapy or hormone therapy), orthotic support, radiation therapy (external beam radiotherapy or stereotactic body radiotherapy), and minimally invasive localised percutaneous procedures such as cryoablation, photodynamic therapy, microwave ablation and radiofrequency ablation. These techniques may also be used with kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty to improve structural or mechanical stabilisation after tumour ablation. Open surgery (or surgery combined with radiotherapy) may be suitable for some people with spinal cord compression and vertebral fractures.

The procedure

2.3 Radiofrequency ablation is a procedure for palliative treatment of spinal metastases. It is usually done in a day-case setting using a transpedicular or parapedicular approach under general anaesthesia or local anaesthesia with sedation. The approach is either percutaneous, endoscopic or surgical.

2.4 Under imaging guidance (fluoroscopy, CT or MRI), a radiofrequency probe is inserted into the spinal tumour. The radiofrequency probe is attached to a radiofrequency generator, which creates high-frequency alternating current pulses that heat and destroy the tumour.

2.5 Radiofrequency ablation is not usually done if the spinal metastases are close to neurological structures because of the risk of neurological injury.

2.6 This is a standalone radiofrequency ablation procedure and not an adjunct to vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty.

  • National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE)