“…Median reported age of presentation in the literature is between 46 and 60 years, 4 however, there are case reports of younger individuals, with the youngest being 14‐years old, who developed features similar to PPFE after exposure to cyclophosphamide 5 and a 16‐year old with idiopathic PPFE 6 . While more patients with high‐risk neuroblastoma are surviving, thanks to intensive multimodal chemotherapy, 1 long‐term follow‐up studies have revealed that survivors are at a higher risk of treatment‐related complications including dysfunction of musculoskeletal, neurologic, endocrinal, sensory, cardiovascular, renal, and pulmonary function in addition to increased rates of secondary malignancies 7 . Specific pulmonary complications described include chronic respiratory symptoms, abnormal PFT, and bronchiectasis 7 …”