CT fluoroscopy-guided vertebral augmentation with a radiofrequency-induced, high-viscosity bone cement (StabiliT®): Technical results and polymethylmethacrylate leakages in 25 patients

Christoph Gregor Trumm, Tobias F. Jakobs, Robert Stahl, Torleif A. Sandner, Philipp M. Paprottka, Maximilian F. Reiser, Christoph J. Zech, Ralf Thorsten Hoffmann

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To assess the technical results of CT fluoroscopy-guided, radiofrequency-induced vertebral augmentation (StabiliT®) in terms of vertebral height restoration and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) leakages, occurring in 25 individual patients with vertebral compression fractures and osteolysis. Materials and methods: From 07/2010 to 08/2011, 25 patients (16 women, nine men; age 71±14; range 41-89) with painful vertebral compression fractures due to osteoporosis (n=19), metastases (n=2) or multiple myeloma (n=4) underwent vertebral augmentation with a radiofrequency-activated, high-viscosity polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) bone cement (StabiliT® Vertebral Augmentation system; DFINE Europe GmbH, Mannheim) under local anesthesia. Thirty-four vertebrae (Th5-L5) were treated in 27 sessions under CT fluoroscopy guidance (128-row CT, Somatom Definition AS, Siemens, Erlangen) using a unilateral access and a cavity-creating osteotome prior to remote-controlled, hydraulically driven cement injection. 1/2/3 levels were treated in 21/5/1 session(s). Vertebral height change in the midsagittal plane (anterior, midvertebral, posterior endplate distance) and PMMA leaks were retrospectively evaluated using the postinterventional CT. Results: All patients were successfully treated in the first session. Mean (MV±SD) procedure time and amount of injected PMMA were 56±14 min and 4.5±1.4 ml, respectively. Mean anterior/midvertebral/posterior height gain was +7.1/+9.7/+0.4 %. Small local vertebral leaks were observed in 18/34 vertebrae (53 %) without any clinical sequelae. No major complications occurred. Conclusions: CT fluoroscopy-guided, RF-induced vertebral augmentation with a high-viscosity bone cement (StabiliT®) was safe and technically successful in all patients. Using a hydraulic cement injection technique, a moderate restoration of anterior and midvertebral height was seen while the system was not markedly superior to standard vertebroplasty regarding the frequency of minor asymptomatic PMMA leaks.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)113-120
Number of pages8
JournalSkeletal Radiology
Volume42
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Kyphoplasty
  • Osteoporotic fractures
  • Pathological fractures
  • Polymethylmethacrylate
  • Vertebroplasty

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