Hand & nail unit reconstruction
The hand carries a high cumulative UV burden; cSCC and acral lentiginous melanoma are the predominant skin cancers. Reconstruction must preserve sensation, mobility and grip strength as well as appearance. For subungual melanoma in situ, digit-preserving nail-unit excision with full-thickness skin graft reconstruction can preserve length and function. Invasive subungual melanoma requires melanoma MDT discussion and oncologically appropriate excision; amputation remains standard where bone, joint or functionally critical deep structures are involved.
Dorsal hand defects
- Small superficial defects with a vascular bed: full-thickness skin graft from groin or supraclavicular fossa.
- Larger dorsal defects may still graft well if paratenon / periosteum is intact and tendons glide freely.
- Exposed tendon without paratenon, exposed bone, joint or hardware usually needs vascularised tissue rather than a graft alone.
- Preferred vascularised options are usually local or regional flaps selected for the defect: local rotation / transposition flaps where laxity allows, posterior interosseous flap, reverse radial forearm flap, groin flap or free flap for larger composite defects.
- Dermal regenerative templates are occasional staged adjuncts in selected cases, not routine substitutes for flap cover.
Palmar / fingertip pulp defects
- Full-thickness graft from hypothenar eminence — glabrous match, donor closes primarily.
- V-Y advancement (Atasoy volar, Kutler lateral) for transverse or dorsal-oblique fingertip amputations < 1 cm without significant exposed bone (or after rongeuring back any small bony prominence). With substantial bone exposure, V-Y typically fails — consider cross-finger or thenar flap.
- Cross-finger flap — donor from dorsum of adjacent middle phalanx; two-stage with division at 2 weeks.
- Reverse cross-finger flap — for dorsal fingertip defects.
- Thenar flap — for index/middle fingertip pulp defects in young patients with good range of motion.
- Heterodigital island flap (Littler) — neurovascular island from non-dominant ulnar digit for sensate thumb pulp reconstruction.
- First dorsal metacarpal artery (FDMA, kite) flap from index dorsum to thumb.
Nail unit reconstruction
Wide local excision technique
- For melanoma in situ, mark an appropriate clinical margin around the involved nail unit and extend proximally to include the germinal matrix at the proximal nail fold.
- Excise the involved nail unit en bloc — nail plate, nail bed, germinal matrix and overlying skin to the appropriate deep plane.
- If periosteum is preserved and the bed is vascular, full-thickness skin grafting is usually appropriate.
- Exposed bone, tendon or joint generally needs revision to a graftable bed or vascularised local / regional flap cover.
- Full-thickness skin graft from glabrous donor (hypothenar) for pulp surface; non-glabrous (groin) acceptable for dorsal coverage.
Invasive disease
Do not assume that digit preservation is appropriate for invasive subungual melanoma. Management depends on Breslow depth, ulceration, anatomical extent, bone / joint involvement, imaging and MDT assessment. Reconstruction should follow the oncological plan, not drive it.
Digit-preserving nail-unit excision is principally a reconstruction strategy for melanoma in situ. Invasive subungual melanoma should be discussed in the melanoma MDT before reconstruction is planned.
When to refer to hand surgery
- Any defect crossing a joint.
- Tendon, nerve or bone exposure.
- Subungual melanoma (consider hand surgeon + plastic surgeon joint approach).
- Dominant hand functional surgery.
References
- Anda T et al. Surgical treatment of subungual melanoma: digit-sparing wide local excision. Br J Dermatol; 2019.
- Cordova A et al. Functional fingertip reconstruction: review of techniques. Indian J Plast Surg; 2020;53:171–9.
- Sammer DM, Chung KC. Atlas of Hand Surgery: Difficult Defect Reconstruction.
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