Minimally Invasive Stabilization Versus Open Surgery for Spinal Metastases: A Retrospective Study Utilizing Propensity Score Matching and Weighting Sensitivity Analyses
Kamil Krystkiewicz, Aleksander Kowal, Agata Krajniak, Łukasz Kuncman, Marcin Tosik

TL;DR
This study compares minimally invasive and open spinal surgery for cancer patients, finding fewer wound issues with the minimally invasive approach.
Contribution
The study provides comparative evidence on wound-related outcomes between minimally invasive and open spinal stabilization for metastases.
Findings
Minimally invasive surgery had lower wound-healing disorder rates compared to open surgery.
Open surgery was associated with higher rates of surgical site infections.
Estimated blood loss was similar between the two surgical approaches.
Abstract
Background: Minimally invasive spinal stabilization (MISS) is increasingly used in metastatic spine surgery, but comparative evidence vs. open posterior stabilization (OPEN) remains limited. We compared perioperative outcomes, focusing on wound-related morbidity. Methods: This retrospective single-center cohort included 71 patients undergoing posterior stabilization for spinal metastases (MISS n = 45; OPEN n = 26). Wound-healing disorder was the primary endpoint. Groups were compared using nonparametric exact tests; adjusted and propensity score analyses were performed to assess robustness. Results: Baseline SINS, operated segment, and instrumented levels were comparable. BMI was higher in MISS (25.8 [24.0–29.7] vs. 22.1 [20.0–24.9] kg/m2; p = 0.001), and urgent admissions were more frequent in OPEN (42.3% vs. 11.1%; p = 0.006). Wound-healing disorders occurred in 6.7% (3/45) of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsManagement of metastatic bone disease · Spinal Fractures and Fixation Techniques · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology
