
The Spinal Tumor Program at the Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center is an innovative subspecialty dedicated to patients with tumors of the spine and spinal cord. The goal of the service is to improve patient care with new treatments that improve quality of life and prevent paralysis and disabling pain for patients with cancer.
About Spine Tumors
Spine tumors are classified as either primary (benign or malignant) or secondary (metastatic) tumors. The spine is one of the most common places in the body for the spread (metastasis) of cancer. Each year, an estimated 18,000 people in the U.S. are diagnosed with metastatic spine disease. More than 40 percent of all patients who have cancer elsewhere in the body, including breast, lung, prostate, thyroid, renal, and colon, will experience the spread of their cancer to their spine in their lifetime.
Spinal tumors can occur inside the spinal cord itself (intradural, intramedullary) or inside the dura (the tough covering over the spinal cord) but outside of the spinal cord (intradural, extramedullary). Tumor growth can lead to a pathological fracture or to spinal cord or nerve root compression. The goal of treatment is to remove the tumor, preserve or improve neurological function, and to provide pain relief and structural stability.
Interdisciplinary Team Approach to Spine Tumor Treatment
Drs. Roger Härtl and Eric Elowitz treat patients with spinal tumors at the Weill Cornell Brain and Spine Center. The interdisciplinary team includes neurosurgeons, neuro-oncologists, radiation oncologists, neuroradiologists, neuropathologists, nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, neuropsychologists, physical therapists, social workers, pharmacists, and case managers.
A weekly tumor conference provides an opportunity to discuss every patient under our care. After evaluation of clinical reports, radiology studies, and pathology materials, recommendations are made for therapeutic options for each patient. These may include surgery, radiation therapy, and standard or investigational chemotherapies. This interdisciplinary approach leads to highly coordinated and expert quality patient care as well as superior patient satisfaction.
We offer our patients state-of-the-art spinal stabilization for metastatic spine tumors to preserve neural function and improve quality of life. We emphasize minimally invasive techniques, such as retropleural thoracotomies, short segment fusions, and the use of cages to enhance fusion. For tumors of the spinal cord, we emphasize intraoperative monitoring and stimulation of the spinal cord to maximize the safety of the resection.
Procedures such as kyphoplasty and vertebroplasty are available to reconstruct compressed vertebral bone, restore alignment, or remove pressure on a nerve. Technically, the main concerns in the treatment of a spinal metastasis are to preserve mechanical and neurologic function. The early diagnosis and treatment of spinal cord tumors are essential in reducing pain, preserving or improving neurological function, and improving quality of life.
Treating the Person, Not Just the Disease
Our multidisciplinary spine cancer team is dedicated to exploring all options with patients and their family members, providing the most advanced treatments possible based on each patient's unique needs and desires.
As new, more powerful, and targeted treatments become available, more and more people are living with cancer. Our goal is to provide patients with the full range of cancer management strategies, so that they can continue to live as normally and actively as possible. In cases where cancer cannot be cured, palliative treatments (or symptom relief) can improve a patient's quality of life by increasing or restoring mobility, relieving pain, numbness and other symptoms, and allowing the return to normal daily activities.
Opportunities to participate in research protocols and clinical trials are available. Please contact Erma Bell for details. elb2014@med.cornell.edu
Our Care Team
- Hansen-MacDonald Professor of Neurological Surgery
- Director of Spinal Surgery
- Assistant Professor of Neurological Surgery
- Leon Levy Research Fellow
- Feil Family Brain and Mind Research Institute
- Clinical Neuropsychologist
- Assistant Professor of Neuropsychology in Neurological Surgery
- Assistant Professor of Neurological Surgery
- Assistant Attending Neurologist, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
- Assistant Professor of Neuro-Oncologist