Clinical and radiographic analysis of osteochondromas and growth disturbance in hereditary multiple exostoses.

Journal: Journal Of Pediatric Orthopedics
Published:
Abstract

Hereditary multiple exostoses (HME) is traditionally described as a skeletal dysplasia. However, the discovery that the EXT family of tumour suppressor genes are responsible for HME suggests that it is more appropriate to classify HME as a familial neoplastic trait. In a clinical and radiographic analysis of paired bone length and exostoses number and dimensions in a HME cohort, the local presence of osteochondromas was consistently associated with growth disturbance. In particular, an inverse correlation between osteochondroma size and relative bone length (p<0.01) was found. These data suggest that the growth retardation in HME may result from the local effects of enlarging osteochondromas rather than a skeletal dysplasia effect. This study provides the first clinical rationale for ablation of rapidly enlarging exostoses to reduce growth disturbance.

Authors
D Porter, M Emerton, F Villanueva Lopez, A Simpson