{Reference Type}: Case Reports {Title}: Surgical management of spinal intradural metastatic pathologies: a case-based review. {Author}: Thoma C;Englander ZK;Prezerakos G; {Journal}: J Surg Case Rep {Volume}: 2024 {Issue}: 6 {Year}: 2024 Jun 暂无{DOI}: 10.1093/jscr/rjae108 {Abstract}: Intradural spinal metastases significantly impair neurological function and quality of life, necessitating multimodal, palliative management to preserve mobility and alleviate pain. The effectiveness of systemic chemotherapy and radiotherapy is limited due to the blood-spinal cord barrier and the tumours' radioresistance, respectively. This highlights the urgency for alternative treatments given the rapid neurological decline. Surgical intervention becomes crucial, focusing on maximum tumour debulking to enhance disease control, restore ambulation, and palliate symptoms without compromising neurological function. Achieving this involves meticulous preoperative planning and aggressive intraoperative neuromonitoring. Combining surgery with adjuvant therapies may improve local control and potentially delay recurrence. This case-based review emphasizes the surgical considerations and outcomes in two cases of intradural spinal metastases, underscoring the value of surgery in multimodal therapy.