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WHAT SHOULD BE DONE FOR A PATIENT WITH A SOLITARY ENCHONDROMA OF THE PROXIMAL HUMERUS ?



Abstract

Purpose of the study: The proximal humerus is a common localization for solitary endchondroma. Levy (Clin Orthop2004, 431) emphasized the frequency of associated muscle and tendon disease. Treatment is generally curettage-autograft filling. Use of calcium phosphate bone substitute has been validated (A. Uchida et al. J Bone Joint Surg (Br) 90, F. Gouin Rev Chir Orthop 95, R. Mirzayan J Bone Joint Surg (Am) 2001). This retrospective analysis was conducted to determine the signs and symptoms and report the results of surgical treatment obtained in a consecutive series of 15 patients with metaphyseal enchondroma treated in the same unit.

Material and methods: This series included twelve women and three men, mean age 48.2 years (range 38–73). All complained of pain. Two also had signs of calcification and six presented a cuff tendinopathy. Eight had had one or more joint injections. On average, the enchondromas measured 3.1 cm on the ap view and 3.6 cm on the lateral view. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrated the presence of a subacromial effusion in 13/16 shoulders, supraspinatus tendinopathy in six, calcifications in three, and acromioclavicular arthropathy in three. Curettage was followed by filling with biphased tricalcium phosphate (SBM, Lourdes) associated in nine shoulders with acromioplasty-bursectomy and in two with resection of a calcification.

Results: There were no postoperative complications. Mean follow-up was six months. All patients recovered joint motion, seven were pain free, six complained of pain at exercise and two had episodic pain. There were no local signs of substitute intolerance. Follow-up was greater than one year in 12 patients and greater than two years in eight: seven shoulders were pain free, three presented pain at exercise, and two required analgesic drugs. Radiographically, the limit between the bone substitute and the cancellous bone was imprecise; the bone substitute could not be readily visualized in four shoulders, had faded out in three, and was visible in five.

Discussion: The association of enchondroma and a rotator cuff pathology is common suggesting the tumor could affect disease expression. Imaging provides strong arguments favoring a benign disease. Use of bone substitute for filling is reliable and avoids the need for an iliac graft.

Conclusion: A fortuitously discovered or painful enchondroma of the humerus should be treated by curettage-filling with bone substitute as soon as the nature of the tumor has been clearly identified and/or strong uptake on scintigraphy visualized. This is a supplementary operative argument suggesting an associated cuff pathology.

Correspondence should be addressed to SOFCOT, 56 rue Boissonade, 75014 Paris, France.