Treatments for vertebral tumors include surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy and other medicines. Other options might include minimally invasive procedures to hurt the tumor cells or stabilize the bones in the spine. Not every vertebral tumor needs treatment. Sometimes careful monitoring can watch a vertebral tumor to see if it grows.
Your healthcare team considers many factors when creating your vertebral tumor treatment plan. These factors include the type of vertebral tumor you have and its location. The team also considers your overall health and your preferences.
Careful monitoring
Many vertebral tumors are found before they cause symptoms. They might not need treatment right away. Instead, your healthcare team might carefully monitor the tumor to see if it grows. Some vertebral tumors never require treatment.
Careful monitoring might be the right approach for small tumors that aren't cancerous. It also might be right for slow-growing tumors that aren't causing symptoms.
Surgery
The goal of surgery is to remove all of the vertebral tumor. Surgeons take care not to hurt the spinal cord or surrounding nerves during surgery.
Sometimes it's not possible to remove all of the tumor. In these situations, the surgeon might remove as much of the tumor as possible. Other treatments might be used after surgery to hurt any tumor cells that are left. Options might include radiation, chemotherapy or ablation treatments.
Surgery also might be used to relieve symptoms caused by a vertebral tumor. If the tumor causes pain that isn't relieved by other treatments or if the tumor presses on the spinal cord, surgery might help provide relief.
Vertebroplasty
Vertebroplasty is a treatment that injects bone cement into a cracked or weakened spinal bone. A similar procedure is called kyphoplasty. These procedures might help strengthen a bone that's weakened by a tumor. They can help relieve pain.
Ablation treatments
Ablation is a procedure that applies treatment directly to the tumor cells in order to hurt them. Some types of ablation apply energy to the tumor cells that causes them to heat up. Procedures that do this include radiofrequency ablation and microwave ablation. Using extreme cold to hurt the tumor cells is called cryoablation. Sometimes ablation involves using alcohol to hurt the tumor cells.
Radiation therapy
Radiation therapy treats tumors with powerful energy beams. The energy can come from X-rays, protons or other sources.
For vertebral tumors, radiation therapy may be used after surgery. It can hurt any tumor cells that might be left. When surgery isn't an option, radiation therapy might be used instead. Radiation therapy also is used to help relieve symptoms caused by a vertebral tumor. It can slow the growth of a vertebral tumor and relieve pain.
Healthcare teams take great care to aim the radiation to the exact spot needed to control the tumor. They work to limit how much radiation reaches nearby organs, including the spinal cord. This helps reduce the risk of complications caused by radiation therapy. Types of radiation therapy that can help in this way include stereotactic body radiotherapy and proton beam radiation therapy.
Chemotherapy and other medicines
Chemotherapy treats cancer with strong medicines. This therapy might be an option for the treatment of cancerous vertebral tumors. It can help slow the growth of the cancer. Most vertebral tumors that aren't cancerous don't respond to chemotherapy treatments.
Targeted therapy medicines also may be an option for treating cancerous vertebral tumors. Targeted therapy for cancer is a treatment that uses medicines that attack specific chemicals in the cancer cells. By blocking these chemicals, targeted treatments can cause cancer cells to die. Your cancer cells may be tested to see if targeted therapy is likely to help you.