Balloon kyphoplasty , a quick and minimally invasive spinal  repair procedure, provides rapid pain relief, increases mobility, and reduces  the need for painkillers compared with standard non-surgical care of vertebral  compression fractures (VCFs) that often occur in cancer patients. These findings  from the first randomised trial of kyphoplasty in cancer patients with VCFs,  published in The Lancet Oncology, suggest that the  procedure is a safe alternative treatment that should be offered to all cancer  patients with painful VCFs.
 
Painful and debilitating VCFs are a common complication of cancers  that have spread (metastasised). Although normally treated non-surgically with  painkillers, bed rest, and physiotherapy, these methods have limited  effectiveness and can cause serious side-effects. Because poor bone quality is  common among patients with cancer, open surgery is usually reserved for those  with neurological impairment. A few non-randomised studies in cancer patients  with VCFs have reported reduced pain and improved function and quality of life  after kyphoplasty treatment.
 
The Cancer Patient Fracture Evaluation (CARE) randomised trial was  designed to compare the safety and efficacy of balloon kyphoplasty with standard  non-surgical care of cancer patients with VCFs, at 22 sites across Europe, the  USA, Canada, and Australia.
 
Between 2005 and 2008, 134 patients were randomly assigned to balloon  kyphoplasty (70) or non-surgical management (64) and their back function  assessed one month after surgery or start of treatment using a questionnaire to  measure disability**. Additionally, quality of life, back pain and  function, and use of pain killers were assessed at regular intervals up to 12  months.
 
At 1 month, patients in the kyphoplasty group reported a marked  improvement in their back disability score whereas there was no change in the  non-surgical treated patients.
 
Patients given immediate kyphoplasty also had significant  improvements in quality of life and more rapid pain relief (one week after  surgery) than those receiving non-surgical care. Additionally, fewer patients in  the kyphoplasty group were using painkillers, walking aids, back bracing, or  were on bed rest at 1 month.
 
During the first month, adverse events were similar between the two  groups. The most common side-effects were back pain and symptomatic vertebral  fractures. Importantly, a low incidence of new fractures in the kyphoplasty  group at 1 year, suggests that the procedure does not increase the risk of new  fractures.
 
Patients given kyphoplasty treatment showed improvements in spinal  function, quality of life, and pain during the entire study (12  months).
 
The authors point out: “Kyphoplasty for patients with cancer can be  done and patients discharged from the treatment facility within 24 h…[it]  typically requires minimal recovery time, and does not delay chemotherapy or  radiation therapy.”
 
They conclude: “The improved survival times of patients with cancer  in general, especially those with metastatic bone disease, accentuate the  importance of managing their comorbidities…The results of this study indicate  that balloon kyphoplasty should be considered as an early treatment option for  patients with cancer with symptomatic VCFs.”
Source: Lancet Oncology