Biportal Endoscopic Spine Surgery for Epidural Metastatic Tumors: A Surgical Technical Note With a Case Series
10.21182/jmisst.2025.02593
- Author:
Chan Yang NOH
1
;
Il CHOI
;
Junsoo JANG
Author Information
1. Department of Neurologic Surgery, Hallym University Dongtan Sacred Heart Hospital, Hwaseong, Korea
- Publication Type:Video
- From:
Journal of Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery and Technique
2026;11(1):140-143
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Endoscopic spine surgery has rapidly evolved as a minimally invasive technique for treating various spinal pathologies. However, its use in removing epidural metastatic tumors remains insufficiently explored. This video article presents 2 cases utilizing unilateral biportal endoscopic spine surgery for resection of epidural metastatic tumors causing spinal cord compression. The first case involved a 63-year-old woman with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer at T4–5, and the second case an 86-year-old man with prostate cancer metastases at T6–9. Both patients presented with motor weakness (American Spinal Injury Association [ASIA] grade C) and potential spinal instability (SINS [Spinal Instability Neoplastic Scale] score 7). The surgical techniques emphasized precise identification and dissection of the tumor–dura interface to minimize dural injury and bleeding—an essential consideration when managing vascular lesions, particularly under antiplatelet therapy. Both cases achieved complete tumor resection with minimal blood loss (60–90 mL) and operative times of 71 and 109 minutes, respectively. Postoperatively, both patients improved to ASIA grade D and began early radiotherapy, underscoring the advantages of this minimally invasive approach in enabling prompt adjuvant treatment. Endoscopic epidural tumor removal represents a safe and less invasive alternative to open surgery for selected patients, though further long-term evaluation is warranted.