Literature DB >> 18085191

Ewing's sarcoma: imaging features.

B Peersman1, F M Vanhoenacker, S Heyman, B Van Herendael, M Stam, P Brys, K L Verstraete, I Samson, J Sybers, P Van Dyck, P M Parizel, A M De Schepper.   

Abstract

AIM: To define an imaging prototype of Ewing's sarcoma (ES).
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Sixty-four patients with a histopathologically and/or genetically proven diagnosis of ES were analyzed for clinical parameters (age, gender and location), radiographic and CT appearance (distribution, matrix, margins, periosteal reaction, articular extension, cortical reaction and the presence of a pathologic fracture). Size, local extension, signal intensity, degree and pattern of enhancement, and the presence of skip metastases were evaluated on MRI. Distant metastases were recorded on bone scintigraphy and chest CT scan.
RESULTS: Patient's age ranged between 7-67 (mean 17.9). Male/female ratio was 2.4/1. Location in the pelvis was most frequent (31%), followed by the femur (20%) and tibia (11%). Most tumors were mixed lytic-sclerotic (75%), and purely lytic in 25%. Plain films and CT scan showed a spiculated periosteal reaction in 50%. A Codman's triangle was seen in 27%. Articular extension was difficult to assess on radiographs. Cortical permeation and destruction is seen in respectively 31 and 42%, whereas cortical thickening is seen in 20%. Pathologic fracture occurred in 7.8%. MRI showed a large mass, with a soft tissue component of more than 50% in 67%. Degree and pattern of enhancement pattern was variable. Signal intensity on T1- and T2-WI was non-specific. Joint involvement was seen in 23%. Isolated involvement of the soft tissue (extraskeletal ES) was seen in 1.5%. Skip metastases at initial presentation were present at initial presentation in 14% and distant metastases in 22%.
CONCLUSIONS: ES occurs in young patients. On radiographs/CT, 37.5% are located in the axial skeleton and 62.5% in the peripheral skeleton. ES is mostly mixed sclerotic-lytic. A spiculated periosteal reaction is most frequent. The most characteristic finding on MRI is the presence of a large soft tissue mass.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18085191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JBR-BTR        ISSN: 0302-7430


  6 in total

1.  Case 2: a 10-year-old girl with hip pain.

Authors:  Arnold C Merrow
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2015-04-21

Review 2.  Bone metastasis from colon carcinoma in an 11-year-old boy: radiological features and brief review of the literature.

Authors:  Marco Colangeli; Carlotta Calamelli; Marco Manfrini; Tommaso Frisoni; Davide Maria Donati
Journal:  Skeletal Radiol       Date:  2014-10-29       Impact factor: 2.199

3.  Radiological evaluation of the periosteal reactions in the jaws: a retrospective CBCT study.

Authors:  Gürkan Ünsal; Merva Soluk-Tekkeşin; Kıvanç Bektaş-Kayhan; İlknur Özcan
Journal:  Oral Radiol       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 1.882

4.  Pattern of primary tumors and tumor-like lesions of bone in children: retrospective survey of biopsy results.

Authors:  Esra Akyüz Özkan; Ceren Canbey Göret; Zeynep Tuğba Özdemir; Serdar Yanık; Meryem Doğan; Aylin Gönültaş; Ayşe Neslin Akkoca
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Pathol       Date:  2015-09-01

5.  Epiphyseal Ewing Sarcoma in a skeletally mature patient: A case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  Rola Husain; Roberto A Garcia; Mingqian Huang; Idoia Corcuera-Solano; Etan Dayan
Journal:  Radiol Case Rep       Date:  2021-03-19

6.  Diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance imaging in the assessment of periosteal reactions in bone sarcomas using conventional radiography as the reference.

Authors:  José Luiz de Sá Neto; Marcelo Novelino Simão; Michel Daoud Crema; Edgard Eduard Engel; Marcello Henrique Nogueira-Barbosa
Journal:  Radiol Bras       Date:  2017 May-Jun
  6 in total

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