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Updated: Mar 21 2022

Ewing's Sarcoma

Images
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/Case B - tibia - xray A - Parsons_moved.png
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/Case B - tibia - xray B - Parsons_moved.png
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/Case B - tibia - T1 - Parsons_moved.png
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/6e_moved.jpg
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/SA histo_moved.jpg
https://upload.orthobullets.com/topic/8047/images/Case C - femur - xray  - Parsons_moved.png
  • summary
    • Ewing's Sarcoma is a malignant, distinctive small round cell sarcoma associated with a t(11:22) translocation which most commonly occurs in the diaphysis of long bones in patients <25 with regional pain, swelling and fevers.
    • Diagnosis is made with a biopsy showing sheets of monotonous small round blue cells with prominent nuclei and minimal cytoplasm and immunostaining positive for CD99.
    • Treatment is usually neo-adjuvant chemotherapy and limb salvage surgical resection, followed by adjuvant chemotherapy +/- radiation. 
  • Epidemiology
    • Incidence
      • 3/1,000,000 (rare)
      • second most common primary malignant bone tumor in children
        • accounts for 3% of all pediatric malignancies and 10% of all primary malignant bone tumors
    • Demographics
      • male:female ratio = 1.5:1
      • 5-25 years of age most common 
        • 80-90% of patients are <20 years of age with peak incidence between 10-15 years old
      • uncommon in African Americans and Asian populations
    • Location
      • bone
        • split evenly between axial skeleton and long bones of appendicular skeleton
          • metadiaphysis of long bones (~50%)
            • femur
            • tibia
            • humerus
          • pelvis (~25%)
          • scapula
      • soft tissue
        • rare
  • Etiology
    • Pathophysiology 
      • cell biology
        • cell of origin in Ewing's Sarcoma unknown, however, thought to be of neuroectodermal origin
    • Genetics
      • mutations
        • t(11:22) translocation
          • found in 85-95% of cases
          • leads to the formation of a fusion protein (EWS-FLI1)
            • can be identified with PCR/FISH and useful to differentiate Ewing sarcoma from other round cell lesions
        • less common translocations including t(21:22) with fusion protein EWS-ERG comprise remaining 10-15%
    • Associated conditions
      • metastatic disease
        • lungs (50%), bone (25%), bone marrow (20%) are common sites
        • 26-28% present with distant macrometastases
      • secondary malignant neoplasm
        • secondary to treatment with chemotherapy +/- radiation
        • hematologic secondary malignancy
          • acute myeloid leukemia
          • myelodysplastic syndrome
        • solid secondary tumors
          • sarcoma
          • carcinoma
  • Classification
    • Staging
      • almost all tumors are MSTS stage IIB or III (see table below)
      • presence of macrometastases has prognostic significance
      • MSTS staging
      • MSTS Staging for Malignant tumors
      • Stage
      • Grade
      • Site
      • Metastasis
      • IA
      • Low Grade
      • T1 - intracompartmental
      • M0 (none)
      • IB
      • Low Grade
      • T2 - extracompartmental
      • M0 (none)
      • IIA
      • High Grade
      • T1 - intracompartmental
      • M0 (none)
      • IIB
      • High Grade
      • T2 - extracompartmental
      • M0 (none)
      • III
      • Metastatic
      • T1 or T2 - intra or extra-compartmental
      • M1 (regional or distant)
  • Presentation
    • History
      • >50% have symptoms for over 6 months before diagnosis
        • delayed diagnosis more common in pelvis, axial skeleton
    • Symptoms
      • pain
        • most common presenting symptom
        • often worsens at night
      • swelling, erythema
        • often mimics an infection
      • mass
        • may not be palpable until it is quite large
      • fever (25%)
      • weight loss
    • Physical exam
      • inspection
        • swelling
        • local tenderness
      • motion
        • limp and decreased range of motion possible depending on location of tumor
  • Imaging
    • Radiographs
      • recommended views
        • AP and lateral of affected and surrounding areas
      • findings
        • large destructive lesion in the diaphysis or metaphysis with an ill-defined, permeative, moth-eaten appearance
        • lesion may be purely lytic or have variable amounts of reactive new bone formation
        • periosteal reaction may give an "onion skin" or "sunburst" appearance
        • large, associated soft tissue mass appreciated in >80% of cases
    • Bone scan
      • indications
        • used as part of staging workup to detect skip or distant metastases
          • occur in 10% of cases
      • findings
        • will show very "hot" lesion
    • MRI 
      • indications
        • used to identify:
          • soft-tissue extension
          • marrow involvement
          • relationship of lesion to adjacent neurovascular structures
        • can be used to assess response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiation
      • findings
        • defines local extent of tumor
        • demonstrates large soft tissue component
        • T1: low to intermediate signal
        • T1 w/ contrast: prominent enhancement with heterogeneity 
        • T2: high signal w/ heterogeneity
    • CT chest
      • indications
        • required as initial staging workup to look for pulmonary metastasis
          • useful for staging and detecting macrometastases
  • Studies
    • Labs
      • ESR is elevated
      • WBC is elevated
      • anemia is common
      • lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) is elevated
    • Tissue biopsy/histology
      • gross appearance
        • gray/white with variable amount of necrosis, hemorrhage or cyst formation
        • may have liquid consistency mimicking pus
      • findings
        • sheets of monotonous small round blue cells
        • high nuclei: cytoplasm ratio 
        • may have pseudo-rosettes (circle of cells with necrosis in center)
      • immunostaining
        • positive
          • CD99 (in 95%)
          • MIC2
          • CD45
          • vimentin
          • PAS positive (intracellular glycogen)
          • neuron specific enolase (NSE)
          • S100
          • Leu7 (CD57)
        • negative
          • cytokeratin
          • reticulin (positive in lymphoma)
          • neurofilament (positive in neuroblastoma)
          • myoglobin (positive in embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma)
          • see complete immunostaining chart
    • Bone marrow biopsy
      • required as part of workup for Ewing's to rule out metastasis to the marrow
  • Differential
    • Small-round-cell tumor differential (by age)
      • < 5 yrs: neuroblastoma or leukemia
      • 5-10 yrs: eosinophilic granuloma
      • 5-30 yrs: ewing's sarcoma
      • >30 yrs: lymphoma
      • > 50 yrs: myeloma
    • Osteosarcoma
    • Osteomyelitis
      • Differential of Ewing's Sarcoma
      • Destructive lesion in young patients
      • Small round cell tumors
      • Treatment is Wide Resection & Chemotherapy
      • Ewing's Sarcoma
      • o
      • o
      • o
      • Osteosarcoma
      • o
      • o
      • Lymphoma
      • o
      • o
      • Leukemia
      • o
      • o
      • Eosinophilic Granuloma
      • o
      • o
      • Osteomyelitis
      • o
      • Desmoplastic fibroma
      • o
      • Metastatic disease
      • Neuroblastoma (soft tissue)
      • o
      • Rhabdomyosarcoma (soft tissue)
      • Secondary Sarcoma
      • Dediff. Chondrosarcoma
      • o
      • MFH/Fibrosarcoma
      • Multiple Myeloma
      • o
  • Treatment 
    • Nonoperative
      • chemotherapy + radiation therapy
        • indications
          • non-resectable tumors (e.g. large spinal/pelvic tumors)
          • sites where functional deficit is unacceptable
        • outcomes
          • higher rates of local recurrence (35%) without surgical resection (5-10%)
          • high rates of radiation related complications (>60%)
            • limb-length discrepancies, joint contracture, muscle atrophy, pathologic fracture, secondary malignancy
              • trend is towards surgical resection and away from radiation therapy because of associated morbidity
      • Operative
        • chemotherapy + surgical resection ± adjuvant radiation
          • indications
            • standard of care in most patients
            • where primary tumor can be completely removed (expendable and surgically reconstructible sites)
          • techniques
            • chemotherapy
              • neoadjuvant (8-12 weeks) + adjuvant (6-12 months) 
            • surgical resection
              • goal is to obtain local control and prevent late recurrence of chemoresistant cells
              • when wide margins are obtained, 5-year survival rates are improved
            • adjuvant radiation
              • not necessary if margins are adequate and there is good response to chemotherapy
              • indications
                • positive post-resection surgical margins
                • patients who present with widely metastatic disease
                  • all patients with pulmonary metastases should undergo radiation
                • where chemotherapeutic response has been poor
          • outcomes
            • 5-year survival rate of 39% and 82% in those with and without metastases at diagnosis, respectively
            • 10-year survival rate of 32% and 63% in those with and without metastases at diagnosis, respectively
  • Techniques
    • Chemotherapy
      • technique
        • standard regimen includes vincristine, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide
          • some studies have suggested addition of ifosfamide and etoposide improve survival and decrease failure rates
        • neoadjuvant chemotherapy for 8-12 weeks followed by surgical resection
          • neoadjuvant therapy helps to eradicate micrometastases and reduce size of primary tumor
        • adjuvant chemotherapy for 6-12 months after resection
        • modes of administration and dose intensity vary between protocols
    • Radiation therapy
      • technique
        • radiation field should include pretreatment tumor volume plus a 2-3 cm margin
        • dose is 56-60 Gy
        • no difference in standard fractionation (5 days a week) vs. hyperfractionation (twice daily at lower dose)
    • Surgical resection
      • limb salvage
        • must obtain negative surgical margins
          • 5-year survival improves by over 10% with negative margins
          • if positive margins identified, re-resection should be performed +/- radiation therapy
        • technique
          • vascularized and nonvascularized autograft reconstruction
            • fibular, scapula, iliac crest, rib, clavicle
          • allograft reconstruction
          • allograft-prosthetic composites
          • endoprosthetic reconstruction
          • rotationplasty
        • complications
          • failure to maintain functional limb
          • recurrence of disease
      • amputation
        • more likely in following cases:
          • extremely large tumors involving vital structures (nerves/vessels)
          • unmanageable/displaced pathologic fractures
          • lesion of foot/ankle
            • difficult to obtain negative margins and maintain functional limb
  • Complications
    • Secondary neoplasms
      • bone sarcoma 
        • incidence
          • previously described as 20% at 20 years
        • risk factors 
          • prior radiation therapy
            • sarcoma arises in prior radiation treatment field
            • thought to be dose dependent
              • <60 Gy confers <5% risk
        • treatment
          • wide resection +/- chemotherapy/radiation
      • hematologic malignancy (acute myeloid leukemia/myelodysplasia)
        • incidence
          • 1-2% of survivors affected
          • arises 2-5 years following diagnosis most commonly
        • risk factors
          • prior chemotherapy
            • dose-intensive regimens may increase risk
        • treatment
          • chemotherapy, stem-cell transplantation, targeted drug therapy
    • Recurrence/progression
      • incidence
        • ~20% rate in those without metastases at initial presentation and >60% rate in those with metastases at initial presentation
      • risk factors (see prognosis)
      • treatment
        • extremely poor prognosis after recurrence
          • <10% 5-year survival rate
        • options are limited but may attempt radiation, further radical resection or additional chemotherapy agents
    • Metastases
      • incidence
        • 26-28% have macrometastases on presentation (lungs, bone, bone marrow)
      • treatment
        • cure rates with chemotherapy
          • 30% cure rate for lung mets alone
          • 20% cure rate for bone mets alone
          • <15% cure rate for combined bone and lung mets
    • Radiation therapy complications
      • incidence
        • >60% of patients undergoing radiation have some complication
      • complications
        • limb length discrepancy (especially in skeletally immature)
        • joint contracture
        • muscle atrophy
        • secondary sarcoma
        • pathologic fracture
    • Venous thromboembolism
      • high rate of venous thromboembolic events in patients with sarcoma
      • tumor activation of factor X to factor Xa
  • Prognosis
    • Survival
      • 5 yr survival
        • 65-82% for localized disease
        • 25-40% for metastatic disease
      • 10 yr survival
        • 60-65% for localized disease
        • 30-35% for metastatic disease
    • Poor prognostic factors
      • metastases (most important prognostic indicator)
        • lung metastases better prognosis than bone/bone marrow mets
        • skip metastases (same bone) better prognosis than metastases to another site
      • amount of bone marrow involvement
      • tumor size/location
        • tumors greater than >8cm in size
        • spine and pelvic tumors (worst) > proximal extremities > distal extremities (best prognosis)
      • age and gender
        • older age (>14) worse prognosis
        • male worse prognosis
      • chemotherapy response
        • < 90% tumor necrosis with chemotherapy
      • laboratory parameters
        • elevated lactic dehydrogenase levels (>200 IU/L) indicates large tumors/metastatic disease
        • anemia and elevated WBC indicates extensive disease
      • molecular pathology
        • p53 mutation in addition to t(11:22) translocation
        • overexpression of cell proliferation antigen Ki-67
        • overexpression of HER-2/neu
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