Ewing's sarcoma surgery
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Michael Maddaleni, B.S.
Overview
Surgery
The following are treatment options for all stages of Ewing sarcoma of the bone. The types of treatments given are based on the unique needs of the person with cancer. Rather than using the standard staging system, a simpler system is often used when deciding treatment for Ewing sarcoma. This system divides Ewing sarcoma of the bone into 2 groups: localized and metastatic.
Localized Ewing sarcoma
With localized Ewing sarcoma, the cancer is only in the bone where it started and it has not spread to nearby lymph nodes. There is often a mass or tumour in the soft tissue near the affected bone.
- Chemotherapy is the primary treatment for localized Ewing sarcoma.
- Chemotherapy is used because most people who appear to have localized disease have hidden (occult) metastatic disease.
- Chemotherapy is given before surgery or radiation therapy to:
- Treat possible micrometastases micrometastases Cancer cells that have spread from the original (primary) site to other parts of the body in such small amounts that screening or diagnostic tests cannot find them. shrink the tumor
- It is also given after surgery or radiation therapy to kill all remaining cancer cells.
- Radiation therapy may be offered for localized Ewing sarcoma.
- Radiation is used instead of surgery if the tumor is in a location that makes it inoperable or if surgery would compromise the function.
- It may be given after surgery if the margins contain cancer cells or the surgeon could not remove a wide margin around the tumor.
- Surgery may be offered for localized Ewing sarcoma following chemotherapy.
- The types of surgery that may be done include:
- Limb-sparing surgery
- Amputation
- Reconstruction