Synovial Sarcoma of Palmar Aspect of Hand and Survival: A Rare Case Report
XD09-XD11
Correspondence
Dr. Saroj Kumar Das Majumdar,
Assistant Professor, Department of Radiotherapy, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bhubaneswar-751019, Odisha, India.
E-mail: sarojmajumdar@gmail.com
Synovial sarcomas of the hand are extremely rare entities than most soft tissue sarcomas. The location at finger is further rarer than carpus of the hand. Synovial sarcoma of the hand/finger initially confused with many diagnoses such as myositis, haematoma, synovitis, tendonitis, bursitis, and other inflammatory lesions and therefore needs careful handling of the case with proper evaluation. We report a case of synovial sarcoma of the palmar surface of the right hand at interface of thumb and index finger in a 22-year-old female. The case was initially misdiagnosed as an abscess/haematoma of the finger 10 years back and treated with wide local excision. Synovial sarcoma was diagnosed on microscopic examination of excised specimen. Patient developed recurrent lesion twice locally. During first recurrence, the patient was treated with wide excision followed by radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Second recurrence was with bony destruction at the same site and below elbow amputation was performed.