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SWELLINGS OF THE MEDIAL CLAVICLE IN CHILDREN – MALIGNANCY VANISHINGLY RARE



Abstract

Introduction: Swellings of the medial end of the clavicle in children and adolescents are common. The vast majority represent either osteomyelitis, or a benign conditions such as eosinophilic granuloma. Their radiographic and early clinical appearance, however, are difficult often to discriminate from Ewing’s sarcoma. Unrewarding biopsies are often performed.

Aims: To identify incidences of malignant neoplasm at the medial end of clavicle in patients aged 18 and under from the Scottish Bone Tumour Registry (SBTR), and by questionnaire from European tumour databases.

Methods: The SBTR was searched for childhood malignant neoplasms as above. Questionnaires were sent to 171 European regional and national tumour databases. Information requested included details of patients with malignant neoplasms as above, longevity of database operation and population served. An estimate of European child population rates was made based on a conservative (North Italian) calculation of children aged under 18 representing 14.4% of the population (comparison our region 21.9%). Confidence intervals were calculated using Wilson method.

Results: The SBTR identified 7 children with neoplasms of the clavicle out of a total register of 4009 cases. Only 1 was malignant and this at the lateral end.

Responses were gained from 56 European databases. National databases were less able to identify this detailed anatomical site than regional ones. 30 databases from 12 countries responded with complete data representing 1.619 billion total population person-years. Four malignant tumours at the medial end of clavicle were identified from a total of 233.2 million children-years at risk.

Discussion: By extrapolation, in our region (population 779,000) a malignant childhood medial clavicle tumours is estimated to occur once every 342 years (95%CI 91 years – ∞). It is recommended that biopsy of such childhood swellings should be restricted to patients who present with features atypical of infection or benign lesions.

The abstracts were prepared by Mr Roger Tillman. Correspondence should be addressed to BOOS at the Royal College of Surgeons, 35–43 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PN