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General Orthopaedics

Clinical management of bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation of bone - a series of 22 cases followed up to a maximum of 13 years

British Orthopaedic Association/Irish Orthopaedic Association Annual Congress (BOA/IOA)



Abstract

Bizarre parosteal osteochondromatous proliferation (BPOP), or Nora's lesion, is a rare condition characterised by the formation of surface-based osteocartilaginous lesions typically affecting the hands and feet. 22 cases were identified from the records of a regional bone tumour unit, dating from 1985 to 2009. Of 22 cases, 9 lesions involved the long bones of the hand, 7 the long bones of the feet, 1 case originated from a sesamoid bone of the foot and 5 from long bones (radius, ulna, femur [2] and tibia). Age ranged from 6 to 66 (mean: 31.8) and male to female ratio was 1.8:1. Diagnosis was based on combined radiological and histological features, and initial surgical treatment was excision in 21 cases, and 1 amputation. Follow-up ranged from 12–162 months (mean 32). Recurrence occurred in 6 patients (27%), with mean time to recurrence 49 months (range 10–120). 2 of 8 patients with complete resection margins developed recurrence (25%), versus 4 of 14 with marginal or incomplete resection (28%). Given the potential surgical morbidity inherent in resection, our data suggest that there may be a role for a relatively tissue-conserving approach to the excision of these lesions.