Archive/Outcomes and Predictors of Recurrence Following Open Fasciectomy for Dupuytren’s Disease: A Cohort Study from an Australian Tertiary Centre
Outcomes and Predictors of Recurrence Following Open Fasciectomy for Dupuytren’s Disease: A Cohort Study from an Australian Tertiary Centre
Ishith Seth, Akshay Soni, Omar Shadid et al.
May 30, 2026
en

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Open fasciectomy is the standard treatment for Dupuytren’s disease, but recent Australian outcome data are scarce. This study assessed outcomes and predictors of recurrence after open fasciectomy at a tertiary centre. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed all open fasciectomy procedures for Dupuytren’s disease at Peninsula Health, Victoria (January 2023–October 2024). Data included contracture correction, functional scores (URAM, Southampton), recurrence at 6 and 12 months, complications, and demographic predictors. Appropriate statistical tests were used (significance: p < 0.05). Results: Among 152 procedures (mean age 63.8; 70.2% male), contracture correction was significant for all joints. URAM and Southampton scores improved by 15.3 and 7.6 points (p < 0.001). Complications (22.4%) were mainly transient neuropraxia. Recurrence was 10.5% at six months and 13.8% at twelve months. Smoking and female sex increased recurrence risk. Conclusions: Open fasciectomy provides effective correction, functional gain, and low early recurrence rates. Smoking and female sex predict recurrence, supporting tailored counselling and reaffirming open fasciectomy as the standard for advanced Dupuytren’s disease.

IPC Classification

G06

Keywords

outcomespredictorsrecurrencefollowingopenfasciectomydupuytrendiseasecohortaustraliantertiarycentresurgeriesbackgroundobjectivesstandardtreatmentrecentoutcomedatascarceassessedretrospectivelyreviewed
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