Isolated delayed metastasis to the talus from ewing’s sarcoma

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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.

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Nasr, L., Naffaa, L., El Alayli, A., Abboud, M. R., & Khoury, N. J. (2018). Isolated delayed metastasis to the talus from ewing’s sarcoma. Journal of Radiology Case Reports, 12(8), 17–24. https://doi.org/10.3941/jrcr.v12i8.3164

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