“…1,2 Patients with cancer present spinal metastases in 70% of cases and up to 10% develop spinal cord compression. 2,3 The ratio of these lesions to primary tumors is 40:1 and skeletal dissemination should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a patient with a spinal cord lesion. 1,4,5 Metastatic involvement of the spine is more common in primary tumors of the breast, lung, kidney, thyroid gland, and the prostate, in that order, according to Papastefanou et al 6 In our practice, Valesin Filho et al 7 described the prevalence in 55 patients: breast (32.7%), multiple myeloma (25.4%), prostate (14.5%), gastric carcinoma (5.4%), neoplasia of the lung (3.6%), neoplasia of the kidney (3.6%), and others (14.5%).…”