What Is a Vertebral Hemangioma?
A vertebral hemangioma is a benign lesion made up of abnormal blood-vessel structures that develops within the spongy inner tissue of a spinal bone. It is not a 'cancer'; it is mostly a slow and harmless formation. It is regarded as one of the most common benign lesions of the spine and is frequently found in the chest (thoracic) and lower-back (lumbar) vertebrae. Most hemangiomas involve a small area of a single vertebra and may remain the same size for years. Diagnosis is usually made by MRI and CT imaging; the typical imaging appearance of these lesions is often easily recognised by an experienced physician. What matters is distinguishing whether the lesion carries 'typical/silent' or 'atypical/aggressive' features, because the treatment decision is based on this.
Symptoms: Most Are Silent, a Few Cause Problems
The vast majority of vertebral hemangiomas cause no symptoms, and the patient is usually unaware of the lesion; for this reason many are discovered incidentally on imaging taken for another complaint. In the small number of cases that do cause symptoms, the most common complaint is local back pain at the level of the lesion. A rarer but important situation is when an aggressively behaving hemangioma expands toward the spinal canal or nerve roots; in this case neurological signs such as pain radiating to the legs, numbness and loss of strength may appear. Very rarely, a hemangioma can weaken the vertebral body and increase the risk of a (compression) fracture. For this reason, every symptomatic vertebral hemangioma should be carefully assessed for whether it carries aggressive features.
When Is Follow-Up Alone Enough?
For the vast majority of vertebral hemangiomas, the most appropriate approach is regular follow-up without any intervention. Lesions that are found incidentally, cause no symptoms and show typical, silent features on imaging do not need treatment; in these patients, imaging is usually repeated at intervals to monitor whether the lesion remains stable. A decision to follow up without treatment protects the patient from an unnecessary surgical procedure and its risks. An honest approach matters here: seeing the word 'hemangioma' on a report is often worrying, but the overwhelming majority of these lesions are harmless and cause no trouble for life. The follow-up interval and duration are individualised according to the features of the lesion and the patient's complaints.
Treatment Options for an Aggressive / Symptomatic Hemangioma
Treatment comes onto the agenda only when the lesion causes symptoms or carries aggressive features. In cases that cause pain but do not seriously compromise spinal stability, minimally invasive methods such as vertebroplasty (kyphoplasty when needed), in which bone cement is injected into the vertebral body, can reduce pain and strengthen the vertebra. When the lesion expands into the spinal canal and compresses a nerve or the spinal cord, surgical decompression — relieving the pressure and stabilisation when needed — may be required. In some selected cases, methods such as pre-operative embolisation to reduce blood supply or complementary radiotherapy may also be considered. Which method is appropriate is decided individually, weighing together the location of the lesion, its degree of aggressiveness, the patient's symptoms and general health status.
Realistic Expectations and an Honest Assessment
The most important message in vertebral hemangioma is this: no panic is needed, but the right assessment is. For most patients the word 'treatment' never even arises; observation alone is enough. In the small number of patients who do need treatment, the aim is to relieve symptoms (especially pain and neurological compression) and to make the spine safe. Procedures such as vertebroplasty markedly reduce pain in most suitable cases, but no procedure is without risk and outcomes vary from person to person; no guarantee is given. In cases with neurological compression requiring surgery, the outcome depends on the duration and severity of the compression. In every situation our approach is the same: to avoid unnecessary intervention and, when it is genuinely needed, to recommend the most appropriate method with clear expectations.