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Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 24-31 (January 2007)


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Melanoma of thumb: Retrospective study for amputation levels, surgical margin and reconstruction

Hiroshi FurukawaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Arata Tsutsumida, Yuhei Yamamoto, Satoru Sasaki, Mitsuru Sekido, Hideyuki Fujimori, Tsuneki Sugihara

Received 19 December 2005; accepted 28 January 2006. published online 06 June 2006.

Summary 

For the treatment of melanoma of thumb, the evidence about amputation level (IP joint or MP joint) and cutaneous excision margin has not been fully presented. And reconstructions for lost thumbs need to be balanced against functional and aesthetic requirements of individual patients and overall prognosis. We report 15 patients, who underwent primary excision and reconstruction for thumb melanoma between 1986 and 2004 at Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Hokkaido at Sapporo, Graduate School of Medicine. The patients were reviewed to evaluate the prognostic significance of variables including age and sex of the patient, tumour thickness, staging, level of amputation, and cutaneous excision margin. Our 15 cases were divided into two groups according to amputation level (MP or IP) and cutaneous excision margin (<40mm or ≧40mm) and prognosis was analysed statistically. The stage and thickness were identified as prognostic factors for disease-free survival; however, IP amputation and 10–30mm margin did not compromise disease-free survival. Amputated thumb was reconstructed by pollicization, free toe to thumb transfer, reverse forearm flap, local flap, and skin graft. No major complication of reconstructed thumb occurred. Seven of eight cases of MP amputation were reconstructed by pollicization. On the other hand, five cases of IP amputation were reconstructed by volar skin flap in two cases, reverse forearm flap in two cases, and trimmed first toe transfer in one case. Although a small number of cases, our study is the first attempt focussing on melanoma of thumb, and evaluating amputation level and cutaneous margin separately. The reconstructive algorithm for the amputated thumb is proposed and has various tools including free toe to thumb transfer.

Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Hokkaido at Sapporo, Graduate School of Medicine, Kita-15 Nishi-7, Kita-Ku, Sapporo, 060-8638, Japan

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +81 11 716 1161x6978; fax: +81 11 706 7827.

 This work was presented in ASPS 2005 in Chicago, 25 September 2005.

PII: S1748-6815(06)00291-9

doi:10.1016/j.bjps.2006.01.037


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