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172. EPIDEMIOLOGY STUDY OF HAND AND WRIST TUMOURS



Abstract

Purpose of the study: Available epidemiological data on hand and wrist tumours are scarce and sometimes discordant. In our unit, these tumours are managed conjointly by hand surgeons and tumour specialists. We conducted an epidemiological study of 624 tumours treated from 1980 to 2008.

Material and methods: The recruitment used three methods: diagnostic coding in the database, analysis of discharge letters, study of tumour registries. All hand and wrist tumours treated surgically in our unit were included retrospectively. Exclusion criteria were: patients aged less than 15 years and/or managed in the paediatric surgery unit; poorly identified cases; recurrences.

Results: The study population included 624 tumours (375 female and 249 male). Mean age was 48 years (range 16–94). Eight tumours were malignant: 4 skin, 3 soft tissue, 1 bone metastasis of a primary renal tumour. Soft tissue tumour concerned 525 patients (84.1% of the study population). Respectively, 71 tumours concerned bone and 28 skin. There were 221 synovial cysts. The bone tumours exhibited a harmonious distribution for age and gender with a peak from 35 to 50 years and a sex ratio of 1/1. There were 43 chondromas found at all ages, mainly in long bones.

Discussion: Our series is the third largest reported. A review of the literature identified the eight largest studies available. For 6452 tumours, 81.7% concerned soft tissues, 13% skin, 4.7% bone tissue. These lesions occurred at all ages with female predominance (60%). Malignant tumours were found in 4.4% of the cases. Exclusion of the paediatric cases and the retrospective nature of the data collection were the main biases of this work.

Conclusion: Data on 624 hand and wrist tumours were in agreement with published work. Tumours involved mainly soft tissues. Synovial cysts predominated. Chondromas accounted for 70% of the bone tumours. Malignant tumours were rare (2.9%). For suspect cases, we recommend referral to a specialised centre for the management of malignant tumours of the hand. A pluridisciplinary analysis is indicated to adapt the diagnostic and therapeutic strategy.

Correspondence should be addressed to Ghislaine Patte at sofcot@sofcot.fr