Last reviewed: 9 Mar 2025
Last updated: 01 Apr 2025
Summary
Definition
History and exam
Key diagnostic factors
- known cancer diagnosis
- ≥40 years of age
- back pain
- weakness or paralysis
- numbness or paraesthesias
- sensory loss
- hyperreflexia and Babinski or associated reflexes
- bladder or bowel dysfunction
Risk factors
- tumour type and metastases
- immune system disorders
- radiation exposure
- genotype features
Diagnostic investigations
Investigations to consider
- CT spine
- x-ray
- bone scintigraphy
- positron emission tomography (PET)
- tumour biopsy and histopathology
- serum calcium
- serum alkaline phosphatase
- cancer-specific laboratory testing
- cancer stem cell markers
Treatment algorithm
ACUTE
Contributors
Authors
Kenneth F. Casey, MD, FACS
Clinical Associate Professor Surgery (Neurosurgery)
Michigan State University
Clinical Associate Professor (Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation)
Wayne State University School of Medicine
Detroit
MI
Disclosures
KFC declares that he has no competing interests.
Lisa M. Ruppert, MD
Associate Attending Physiatrist
Department of Neurology-Rehabilitation Medicine Service
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Assistant Professor
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Weill Cornell Medical Center
New York
NY
Disclosures
LMR is an author of references cited in this topic.
Peer reviewers
Marcin Czyz, MD, PhD
Consultant Spine Neurosurgeon
Department of Neurosurgery
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Trust
Birmingham
UK
Disclosures
MC declares that he has no competing interests.
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