Despite the recent progress, non-metastatic pediatric osteosarcomas have now a 5-year overall survival (OS) around 75% and the metastatic forms are decreasing to 20–30%. To increase these survival rates, new molecular approaches are on development to understand and highlight new candidates for targeted therapies. Tyrosine kinase receptors (TKR) are one of this target class, where new drugs were especially developped, screening now a large spectrum of TKR. After the demonstration among cancers of TKR’s clinical utility as surrogate markers to guide the selection of patients susceptible to respond to these treatments, this success was recently tempered in part because of cancers developping resistance mechanisms to these drugs. A study was conducted to evaluate the interest of these molecular targets among pediatric osteosarcomas.