Maturation toward neuronal tissue in a Ewing sarcoma of bone after chemotherapy

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Abstract

Background: Ewing sarcoma is the second most common bone tumor, occurring mainly in children and young adults. It shows a typical primitive, small round cell morphology and a characteristic fusion oncogene involving EWSR1 and members of the ETS family in most of the cases. Neuronal maturation after chemotherapy is a rare phenomenon and we herein describe such an exceptional case. Case presentation: An 8-year old boy was diagnosed with a Ewing sarcoma in the left femur. On biopsy the morphology was typical and there was an EWSR1-FLI1 gene fusion. He underwent neo-adjuvant chemotherapy and resection of the tumor. On microscopic evaluation, part of the tumor showed ganglioneuroblastoma-like differentiation with expression of neuronal markers. The continued presence of EWSR1 rearrangement in both the blue round cell component and the ganglioneuroblastoma-like component was shown by FISH analysis. Conclusions: In conclusion, this case describes the possibility of a Ewing sarcoma to differentiate into a ganglioneuroblastoma-like lesion after neo-adjuvant chemotherapy treatment; the prognostic value of this phenomenon remains questionable.

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Salet, M. C. W., Vogels, R., Brons, P., Schreuder, B., & Flucke, U. (2016). Maturation toward neuronal tissue in a Ewing sarcoma of bone after chemotherapy. Diagnostic Pathology, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13000-016-0516-0

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