


Facts
- First described by Ewing in 1921
- Family of small round cell neoplasms including: 'classic' Ewing sarcoma of bone, extraskeletal Ewing sarcoma, small cell tumor of thoracopulmonary region (Askin tumor), and soft tissue-based primitive neuroectodermal tumors (PNET).
- Currently believed to be due to spontaneous genetic transolocation
- Second most common bone cancer in adolescents and young adults (after osteosarcoma)
- 5-20 years old, male slightly more than female
- Whites much more common than Asians or Africans
Imaging Appearance
- Permeative lytic lesion with soft tissue components
- Ring and arc calcifications (chondroid matrix)
- Codman triangle or onion multi-layered periosteal reaction
- Common locations: pelvic bones (26%), femur (20%), tibia/fibula (18%), chest wall (16%)
- In long bone, diaphysis > metaphysis
- Increased uptake on bone scan
Work-up
- Aim to distinguish localized disease from metastatic disease
- MRI +/- CT of the lesion
- Chest CT to look for pulmonary metastasis
- Whole body bone scan or PET
- Bone marrow biopsy or MRI of the spine
- Tumor at nonaxial skeleton primary site, age <>
Our case: Ewing sarcoma with bone metastases
Reference:
Ludwig JA. Ewing sarcoma: historical perspectives, current state-of-the-art, and opportunities for targeted therapy in the future. Curr Opin Oncol 2008; 20:412-418.
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