Association Between Nutritional Status and Survival in Patients Requiring Treatment for Spinal Metastases
作者
Anne L. Versteeg,Raphaële Charest-Morin,Rafael De La Garza Ramos,Ilya Laufer,William Gemio Jacobsen Teixeira,Ori Barzilai,Alessandro Gasbarrini,Michael G. Fehlings,Dean Chou,Ziya L. Gokaslan,Cordula Netzer,Alessandro Luzatti,Jorrit‐Jan Verlaan,Tony Goldschlager,John H. Shin,John E. O’Toole,Daniel M. Sciubba,Chetan Bettegowda,Michelle J. Clarke,Michael H. Weber
出处
期刊:Neurosurgery [Lippincott Williams & Wilkins] 日期:2025-11-06
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA) is a standardized tool for assessing malnutrition in patients with cancer. The primary aim of this study was to assess the impact of preoperative nutritional status as measured by PG-SGA on survival in patients requiring surgical intervention and/or radiotherapy for spinal metastases. METHODS: Patients with spinal metastases who underwent surgery and/or radiation therapy for symptomatic spinal metastases were enrolled in the AO Spine Metastatic Tumor Research and Outcomes Network, a prospective international multicenter research registry, between September 2017 and August 2022. Using the PG-SGA, nutritional status was classified into 3 categories: A, well nourished; B, moderately malnourished; and C, severely malnourished. RESULTS: A total of 589 patients met the inclusion criteria; 362 were classified as well nourished (61%), 159 were moderately malnourished (27%), and 68 were severely malnourished (12%). The median survival was 491 days, 328 days, and 117 days for well-nourished, moderately malnourished, and severely malnourished patients, respectively. In the multivariate analyses, severe malnourishment (HR 2.5 95% CI 1.4-4.3, P < .01) and an ECOG performance status of 3 or 4 (HR 2.7 95% CI 1.2-6.0) remained associated with significantly worse survival. CONCLUSION: Malnutrition as measured by the PG-SGA demonstrated to be significantly and independently associated with postoperative survival. The PG-SGA is a simple and useful tool to identify spinal metastases patients at risk of early postoperative mortality, and inclusion in the preoperative evaluation of these patients should be considered.