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Percutaneous vertebroplasty for osteoporotic and malignant fractures: Experience with high viscosity cement using a hydrolic injection device, the “CONFIDENCE” system . Bassem A Georgy, MD North County Radiology Assistant Professor of Radiology University of San Diego, California. Background.
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Percutaneous vertebroplasty for osteoporotic and malignant fractures: Experience with high viscosity cement using a hydrolic injection device, the “CONFIDENCE” system Bassem A Georgy, MD North County Radiology Assistant Professor of Radiology University of San Diego, California
Background • Precise control of cement delivery is necessary to minimize the risk of cement leakage • Cavity creation had been linked to decreased leakage without scientific evidence • Higher-viscosity cements associated with lower leakage rates in laboratory vertebral compression model • Higher rate of leakage had been reported with malignant lesions
5 min 8 min 11 min
Purpuse • To assess the clinical feasibility of performing Vertebroplasty on osteoporotic and malignant compression fractures using an ultra viscous cement injected by a hydrolic device to further control cement deposition.
Material and Methods • Single center retrospective review of post-operative radiographs of 125 patients and 213 levels • 94 with benign osteoporotic fractures • 31 patients with malignant compression fractures lesions • All patients treated with Confidence system. • C7 to L5 vertebral bodies.
Material and Methods • The degree of leakage was assessed at each treated level using a strict 4-point scale (none, minimal, moderate, severe). • The pattern of any observed leakage was also characterized as: discal, venous, paravetebral, or epidural. • VAS values were available in 25 patients(14 malignant and 11 benign)
Mild venous leakage Moderate Disk leakage Severe Disc leakage
Results Benign Lesions • Pre-operatively the mean degree of vertebral collapse was 29% • There was no leakage in 50%, • Minimal leakage in 42%, • Moderate leakage in 7% of cases • One case of severe leakage
Results Malignant Lesions • Pre-operatively the mean degree of vertebral collapse was 27% • There was no leakage in 50%, • Minimal leakage in 40%, • Moderate leakage in 10% of cases • No case of severe leakage
Results • The most frequent pattern of leak was venous seen in 52% of leaks, the adjacent disc in 46%, and para- vertebral in 5 % • There were no symptomatic leaks that required surgical intervention. • Leakage rates were very similar in both benign and malignant lesions • Average 51% decrease in pain using VAS scores
T9 L4 T12
T9 T12 L4
T9 T9 T12 T12 L4 L4 Post-op
65 yea-old-women with breast metastasis T7, L1, L4 lesions
75 year-old woman with Myeloma T3 lesion
60 years old women with Breast cancer
C7 C7 C7 Lung Cancer
Conclusion • Vertebroplasty in both osteoporotic and malignant vertebral fractures using a highly viscous cement that can be safely controlled and injected via a hydrolic system can be performed safely with out significant complications