Isolated delayed metastasis to the talus from ewing’s sarcoma

Abstract

Bone metastasis to the hands and feet, known as acrometastasis, is a very rare finding and tends to be associated with extensive metastasis. We herein report the case of a 14-year-old girl known to have a history of successfully treated Ewing's sarcoma arising from the ribs, who presented with a pathologically proven isolated metastatic lesion to the talus 7 years after achieving clinical and radiologic remission. We describe the imaging findings on MRI, CT scan and PET-CT. To our knowledge, talar metastasis from Ewing's sarcoma has been previously reported only twice in the English literature. Noteworthy is the fact that one of the previously reported lesions was considered a skip metastasis, and the other was under-described in terms of primary and secondary tumor location and time to metastasis. In addition, the overall imaging findings were rather suggestive of a benign lesion, particularly on CT scan. © 2018, EduRad. All rights reserved.

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Keywords

Bone metastases, Ct scan, Ewing sarcoma, Mri, Pet-scan, Talus, Adolescent, Bone neoplasms, Diagnosis, differential, Female, Humans, Magnetic resonance imaging, Positron emission tomography computed tomography, Prognosis, Ribs, Sarcoma, ewing, Time factors, Tomography, x-ray computed, Cyclophosphamide, Doxorubicin, Etoposide, Ifosfamide, Vincristine, Aneurysmal bone cyst, Ankle pain, Article, Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Bone metastasis, Bone scintiscanning, Cancer chemotherapy, Case report, Child, Chondroblastoma, Clinical article, Computer assisted tomography, Diffusion weighted imaging, Ependymoma, Follow up, Histopathology, Human, Human tissue, Immunohistochemistry, Needle biopsy, Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, Neuroectoderm tumor, Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, Osteoclastoma, Osteolysis, Pericardial effusion, Positron emission tomography, Radiation dose, Remission, Risk factor, Thorax pain, Treatment response, Bone tumor, Diagnostic imaging, Differential diagnosis, Pathology, Positron emission tomography-computed tomography, Rib, Secondary, Time factor, X-ray computed tomography

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