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Ewing's sarcoma, Part 1 — Introduction, symptoms and treatment

What is Ewing’s sarcoma?

Ewing's sarcoma is the most common type of sarcoma (cancer of bone or soft tissues) in children under the age of ten. Most children diagnosed with this are between the ages of 5 and 25. This cancer usually arises within bone but occasionally is found in soft tissues. The cancer is named after one of the first pathologists to describe the tumor. There is no definitive evidence of what type of tissue this cancer makes (compare to osteosarcoma). There appears to be some relationship to immature (primitive) nerve cells. There is a typical abnormality in the DNA in this tumor, but there is no evidence that the susceptibility to this tumor is inherited.

Incidence and Prevalence

The peak incidence is between ages 10 and 20, it is less common in children under 5 or in adults over 30. Prior to adolescence, the number of males and females affected are equal. After adolescence, however, the number of males affected is slightly higher than the number of females. Ewing’s tumors account for 4% of childhood and adolescent malignancies. Ewing's can occur in any bone in the body. However, the most common sites are the pelvis, thigh, lower leg, upper arm, and rib. The incidence of Ewing’s sarcoma from birth to age 20 years is 2.9 per million population annually. Approximately 10% of patients with Ewing’s sarcoma are aged 20-30 years. Cases occurring later in life are infrequent. The tumor is composed of small round blue cells. Ewing's sarcoma can also arise in soft tissue (extra-skeletal).

Symptoms

Patients with Ewing's sarcoma typically present with pain. They also occasionally have a mass that you can feel and a fever. The pain is usually out of proportion, in both severity and duration, to any specific trauma or injury. These children frequently have pain at night. The cancer is found at the end of bones (near joints) or in the middle, or shaft, of bones.

The diagnosis of Ewing's sarcoma is made by a biopsy. This cancer can spread through the blood stream to the lungs, other bones, or bone marrow. About 25% of patients have cancer found elsewhere (metastases) when initially seen. Metastases are found by doing a computed tomography (CAT or CT) scan of the lungs, bone scan to see the rest of the bones, and aspirate (with the needle) of the bone marrow of the pelvis.

Treatment

Although metastases may not be present initially, they can occur at any time. Treatment of only the tumor in the bone does not keep metastases from showing up and usually leads to only short-term survival. Therefore, treatment of Ewing's sarcoma starts with chemotherapy. The better the response to chemotherapy, the better the chance that the child will survive. The side effects of chemotherapy, as seen with other cancers, include fever, increased risk of infection, and increased risk of bleeding with trauma. The specific side effects depend on the drugs used and the timing of treatment.

Treatment of the bone with the cancer depends on the size of the tumor. This cancer frequently breaks out through the bone, involving a substantial amount of adjacent soft tissue (muscle, nerves, blood vessels). Large tumors are particularly seen in the pelvis. If so much tissue needs to be removed surgically that the extremity no longer is able to function, radiation therapy is used to kill the cancer. For smaller tumors, the bone can be removed surgically and replaced with either a piece of metal that is shaped to look like the bone (similar to the replacements in older people with arthritis) or a bone that is the same size as the removed bone. Although this cancer responds to radiation, there is some evidence that the cancer is less likely to come back if removed surgically, rather than irradiated.

Side effects of medication

In addition to surgery, people with Ewing’s sarcoma usually must have chemotherapy treatments. Like other cancers, a combination of chemotherapy drugs (a group of different very strong medications used to treat cancer) are usually used to treat Ewing’s sarcoma. The side effects depend on which drugs are used to treat the patient. Common side effects include

  • nausea
  • vomiting
  • tiredness
  • low blood cell counts
  • susceptibility to infection
  • hair loss

Ewing's, Part 1 — Introduction, symptoms and treatment

Ewing's, Part 2 — Restrictions and implications for school


For more information, please contact:

Kathy Davis, MSEd, PhD
kdavis2@kumc.edu
(913) 588-6305