Lumbar Extracavitary Corpectomy With a Single Stage Circumferential Arthrodesis: Surgical Technique and Clinical Series
Kern Singh, MD, and Daniel K. Park, MD
Dr. Singh is Assistant Professor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois.
Dr. Park is Staff Spine Surgeon, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan.
Circumferential arthrodesis and reconstruction is necessary after a lumbar corpectomy in the setting of malignancy and infection. The advent of expandable cage technology now allows for safe anterior column reconstruction via a posterior approach with no transection and minimal retraction of the lumbar spinal nerve roots.
Fifteen patients underwent a single-stage, circumferential corpectomy and anterior spinal reconstruction with an expandable cage via a midline, posterior, lateral lumbar extracavitary approach. Posterior segmental pedicle screw fixation and iliac crest bone graft was used in all cases.
Fifteen lumbar extracavitary corpectomy nerve root-sparing procedures have been performed to date, with at least 1-year follow-up (12 tumors/3 infections). No patient suffered any neurological complications. One patient suffered from a postoperative myocardial infarction 10 days after the procedure. Two patients had medical complications that were treated without sequelae.
We present a technical description and case series of patients undergoing a single-stage, circumferential corpectomy and anterior spinal reconstruction with an expandable cage via a midline, posterior, lateral lumbar extracavitary approach with at least 1-year follow-up. The technique is safe, technically feasible, and obviates an anterior approach in this oftentimes critically ill patient population.