Litcius/Paper detail

The Use of Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Instrumentation in Patients with Spinal Oncologic Tumors: A Systematic Review of Literature and Future Directions

Roberto J. Perez-Roman, James V. Boddu, Malek Bashti, Jean-Paul Bryant, Efosa Amadasu, Joseph S. Gyedu, Michael Y. Wang

2023World Neurosurgery20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Metastatic spine tumors affect over 30% of patients who have been diagnosed with cancer. While techniques in surgical intervention have undoubtedly evolved, there are some pitfalls when spinal instrumentation is required for stabilization following tumor resection. However, the use of carbon fiber-reinforced polyetheretherketone (CFR-PEEK) implants has become increasingly popular due to improved radiolucency and positive osteobiologic properties. Here, we present a systematic review describing the use of CFR-PEEK-coated instrumentation in the oncologic population while identifying advantages and potential shortcomings of these devices. METHODS: In accordance with PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) guidelines, a systematic review was conducted in March 2022 to identify articles detailing the use of CFR-PEEK implants for spinal instrumentation in patients with primary and secondary spine tumors. The search was performed using the PubMed, Scopus, and Embase databases. RESULTS: An initial search returned a total of 85 articles among the three databases used. After the exclusion of duplicates and screening of abstracts, 21 full-text articles were examined for eligibility. Eleven articles were excluded due to not fitting our inclusion and exclusion criteria. Ten articles were subsequently eligible for full-text review. CONCLUSIONS: CFR-PEEK possesses a similar safety and efficacy profile to titanium implants but has distinct advantages. It limits artifact, increases early detection of local tumor recurrence, increases radiotherapy dose accuracy, and is associated with low complication rates (9.96%)-making it a promising alternative for the demands unique to the treatment/outcome of spinal oncologic patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineInstrumentation (computer programming)Spinal traumaSystematic reviewMedical physicsMEDLINESpinal cordPsychiatryComputer sciencePolitical scienceOperating systemLawManagement of metastatic bone diseaseSpinal Fractures and Fixation TechniquesSpine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology