Abstract

We present a rare case of a four-year-old boy with a botyroid embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the right middle ear. Rhabdomyosarcoma is a soft tissue malignancy which is thought to originate from embryonic mesenchymal cells of striated skeletal muscle. It is a disease primarily of children and is exceptionally rare in parameningeal regions. The diagnosis is often delayed and easily misdiagnosed as aural polyp. Therefore, advanced disease is common at the time of diagnosis. A four-year-old boy presented with a four-month history of recurrent left ear blood and pus discharge, otalgia and fevers. He attended his GP three times and paediatric A&E 13 times where he received antibiotics for presumed otitis media and externa. He was eventually referred to the otolaryngology department and underwent an examination under anaesthesia of ear and excisional biopsy of a suspicious aural polyp. Staging chest CT and PET scan showed no loco-regional spread or distal metastasis. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated absence of invasion into adjacent organs. Histology confirmed embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma, botryoid subtype. Subsequent to the initial excision of the polyp, he was started on an ifosfamine, vincristine and actinomycin (IVA) chemotherapy regime in three weekly cycles for nine cycles with concomitant radiotherapy. Two weeks subsequent to his first chemotherapy dose he presented with a House-Brackmann II-III facial nerve palsy but no other middle ear complications. He was started on intravenous antibiotics and dexamethasone. The facial nerve palsy incompletely resolved with treatment.

Highlights

  • Rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare soft tissue malignancy with unknown aetiology

  • It is thought to originate from embryonic mesenchymal cells of striated skeletal muscle

  • We present a rare case of a four-year-old boy with a botyroid embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the right middle ear and review the literature

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Summary

Introduction

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare soft tissue malignancy with unknown aetiology. It is thought to originate from embryonic mesenchymal cells of striated skeletal muscle. Case report A four-year-old boy presented with a four-month history of recurrent left ear blood and pus discharge, otalgia and fevers. He attended his general practitioner (GP) three times and Paediatric Accident & Emergency 13 times where he received oral, topical and intravenous antibiotics for presumed otitis media and externa. The facial nerve palsy incompletely resolved with a 2-week course of 3 mg dexamethasone twice daily He is being followed up on the following schedule: 3–4 months in the first 2–3 years, twice a year up to the fifth year, Literature review We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, UpToDate, CINAHL, TRIP Database, BMJ Best Practice, Google Scholar, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and NICE Evidence Search with the following search terms: rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS); ear; aural; middle ear; inner ear; ear canal, parameningeal; ear neoplasm in July 2018.

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