Sorry to hear this! If the vacuum hadn't been lost, there would be no issue.
It'd strictly be cosmetic, but if the glass is broken in a way that would present a safety problem for those in the home, you would have wanted to address that.
When I was a chemist, I was incredibly lucky to have been trained by someone from the former Soviet Bloc, which meant he was old school (not what people mean when they say "old school" today, I mean REAL old school) and practical. So, we were constantly making and modifying a lot of our own lab glassware to suit whatever task was in front of us.
In case anyone else needs to do something along those lines with a vacuum tube, fire up a propane torch, and with a large and sturdy pair of tweezers, put the tip of the tube in the flame. Obviously, your hands will soon tell you if you need to use a glove or not (get a big enough pair of tweezers, and you won't), sacrificing dexterity in order to keep a hold of the tweezers. When the glass begins to liquefy, use the tweezers to pull the glass together into a point, stand the tube up, and let the point fall down on itself. It's like making taffy for anyone who has worked with molten candy. You can also do this to take a dangerous edge off something that's broken around the house that you really don't want to throw away for whatever reason, as the resulting edge is smooth and safe like the edge of a dinner plate or drinking glass. A while back, I discovered this is the way it's done in the tube factories, as it was exactly the same kind of work (chemists and engineers making their own glassware to suit their particular need that day), and my thoughts took me back to an earlier and very happy time in my life.
Of course, like anything else, you need to get the hang of it, so practicing on one or two trash tubes would be a good idea.