Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

7-1-2025

Journal

Advances in Radiation Oncology

DOI

10.1016/j.adro.2025.101806

PMID

40548160

PMCID

PMC12182295

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

6-10-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Purpose: Carbon fiber-reinforced polyetheretherketone (CFRP) spinal implants are gaining popularity in the surgical management of spinal metastasis because of their physical and radiographic properties, which facilitate adjuvant radiation planning and tumor surveillance. Their impact on clinical outcomes is still under investigation. We evaluated the role of hardware material (CFRP vs titanium) in local control and hardware durability in metastatic cases receiving decompressive surgery and adjuvant spinal stereotactic radiosurgery (SSRS).

Methods and materials: This single-institution, retrospective cohort study was approved by the local institutional review board. Patients who underwent decompressive surgery with posterior segmental instrumentation followed by treatment with SSRS for metastatic spine disease were included. Exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) cervical implants, (2) mixed-type hardware, (3) SSRS greater than 60 days after surgery, and (4) less than 3 months magnetic resonance imaging follow-up. Only tumor progression occurring inside or at the margins of the irradiated field was considered.

Results: Eighty-three spinal segments (55 titanium, 28 CFRP; from 82 patients) were evaluated. Except for the number of radiation fractions, proportion of single-fraction 24 Gy cases, and radiation equivalent dose in 2-Gy fractions, no significant differences were found between groups. The median follow-up time was 14.5 months (range, 3.0-70.4 months). Sixteen local progressions were identified, with 15 in the titanium group (P = .009). Using death as a competing factor, local progression-free survival was longer in the CFRP group (HR, 0.127; 95% CI, 0.017-0.945; P = .044). The median time to progression was 9.27 months (IQR, 4.5-15.65 months). Higher equivalent dose in 2-Gy fractions was the only variable associated with local tumor control in both univariate and multivariate analyses (P = .025 and P = .019, respectively). The titanium cohort experienced 4 hardware adverse events, whereas the CFRP group had 2 adverse events (P > .05).

Conclusions: CFRP implants were associated with lower rates of local progression in crude analyses, but did not reach statistical significance in multivariable models. No differences in hardware durability were identified.

Published Open-Access

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