Symptoms |
- Presentation
- pain often accompanied by fever
- often mimics an infection
- Physical exam
- swelling and local tenderness
|
Imaging |
- Radiographs
large destructive lesion in the diaphysis or metaphysis with a moth-eaten appearance
- periosteal lifting may give "onion skin" or "sunburst" appearance
- Bone scan
- hot
- required as part of workup
- MRI often shows a large soft tissue component
- CT chest is important to rule out mets to lungs (very common)
|
Labs |
- ESR is elevated
- WBC is elevated
- Anemia is common
- Bone marrow biopsy
- required as part of workup for Ewing's to rule out metastasis to the marrow
|
Histology |
- Characteristic findings
- sheets of monotonous small cells
- cells have scant cytoplasm
- may have pseudo-rosettes (circle of cells with necrosis in center)
- Immunostain
|
Treatment |
- Multimodality
- multistage chemotherapy and limb salvage resection
- preoperative chemotherapy given for 8-12 weeks followed by maintenance chemotherapy for 6-12 months after surgical resection
- irradiation
- current trend towards surgical resection and away from irradiation due to high risk of irradiation-induced secondary malignancies
- situations where radiation can be used include
- radiation alone for areas that cannot be resected (ie, large bulky pelvic tumors),
- in combination with local resection if surgical margins are close
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