J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1994 Apr;23(4):460-467.

A Case of Large Sacral Chordoma

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, College of Medicine, Korea University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

Chordoma is a relatively rare primary osseous tumor arising from the remnants of the primitive notochord and located along the axial skeleton. It is characterized by is slow growth, hight frequency to invade and destroy bone by direct extension, local recurrence after surgical excision and distant metastasis. It accounts for 1 to 4% of all malignant bone tumors. Approximately 50% of chordomas arise in the sacrococcygeal region, 35% at the clivus, and 15% in the vertebral column above the sacrum. The tumor tends to predominate in males, with roughly a 2 : 1 male-female ratio, and occurs predominantly in the fifth through seventh decades of life. Pain is the most common symptom in the chordomas of the spine, and symptoms of constipation, urinary frequency, or nerve root compression may appear before patients present to their physician. Many patients, therefore, are misdiagnosed as having degenerative disc disease, coccygodynia, or hemorrhoids. A firm, fixed presacral mass can usually be palpated on rectal examination. Surgical extirpation of the tumor is the only curative procedure and the indicated surgical procedure for sacrococcygeal chordoma is a high sacral amputation, maintaining a cuff of normal tissue over the tumor. Radiation therapy seems to be effective with adjuvant or palliative aims. We report a case of large sacral chordoma detected in a 60-year-old female in the course of a clinical examination, which was successfully treated by high sacral resection by a posterior approach and repair of the sacral bone defect with bone cement.

Keyword

Chordoma; Sacrum; Posterior approach

MeSH Terms

Amputation
Chordoma*
Constipation
Cranial Fossa, Posterior
Female
Hemorrhoids
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasm Metastasis
Notochord
Radiculopathy
Recurrence
Sacrococcygeal Region
Sacrum
Skeleton
Spine
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