-
PDF
- Split View
-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Omkar Singh, Kenneth Aldape, Zied Abdullaev, Rust Turakulov, Felipe Andreiuolo, Felipe D'Almeida Costa, Sandra Camelo-Piragua, Peter Pytel, Daniel Zhang, Ewa Borys, Stephen Nix, Igor Fernandes, Emily Sloan, Kester Phillips, Luciano Neder Serafini, Jorge Trejo-Lopez, Joe Mendez, Charles Eberhart, Matthew Smith-Cohn, Stewart Neill, Brock Christensen, Robert Macaulay, Howard Colman, Aivi Nguyen, Caterina Giannini, Rong Li, James Mandell, Tobias Kessler, Wolfgang Wick, Chris Jones, Matthew Clarke, Alan MacKay, Jeffrey Helgager, Han Lee, Giselle Lopez, Arie Perry, Saman Ahmadian, Mohammad Haeri, Shih-Hsiu Wang, Sonika Dahiya, Andrea Souza, Joao Vitor Antunes Marques Gregorio, Hugo Sterman, MacLean P Nasrallah, Orwa Aboud, PATH-23. CLINICOPATHOLOGIC ANALYSIS OF NOVEL METHYLATION CLUSTERS OF IDH-WILDTYPE DIFFUSE GLIOMAS, Neuro-Oncology, Volume 25, Issue Supplement_5, November 2023, Page v172, https://doi.org/10.1093/neuonc/noad179.0653
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
Methylation profiling of brain tumors has revealed novel clusters whose biological and clinical significance is unknown. These include three entities termed by the 12.5 version of the Heidelberg methylation classifier as adult-type diffuse high grade glioma, IDH-wildtype, subtype B (HGG_B), subtype E (HGG_E), and subtype F (HGG_F). We have identified 75 cases belonging to these groups: HGG_B (25 cases, 32% female), HGG_E (40 cases, 42% female), and HGG_F (18 cases, 33% female). Although originally characterized as “adult-type,” we find that 70% of HGG_E cases are pediatric, with a median age at diagnosis of 11 years. HGG_B cases are predominantly seen in young adults, and HGG_F in older adults. The histology varies among methylation classes, with HGG_B cases demonstrating high-grade, predominantly astrocytic, morphology, while HGG_E cases demonstrate high-grade glial histology with distinct nuclear features, and HGG_F cases show highly infiltrative but lower grade glial morphology. Patient outcome data obtained to date shows a collective median survival exceeding 5 years, suggesting re-consideration of the proposed grading for these tumors. MGMT promoter methylation differs across the HGG_B (0%), HGG_E (12%), and HGG_F (0%) subtypes. Mutational analyses show enrichment of TERT promoter mutations in the HGG_F group, while HGG_E samples are enriched for tumors with POLE mutations and elevated tumor mutation burden. HGG_E tumors show epigenetic similarity to pediatric high-grade diffuse gliomas (pedHGG_RTK1A); we therefore propose that HGG_E be considered a pediatric-type HGG. HGG_B tumors show demographic and genomic similarities to high-grade astrocytomas with piloid features, including a subset of cases with CDKN2A/2B loss and ATRX mutation. HGG_F separate into two groups dictated by brain location, and despite the presence of TERT promoter mutations, appear distinct from GBMs. Overall, our work represents an initial effort to understand the morphologic, genomic and clinical characteristics of these previously uncharacterized subtypes of gliomas.
- mutation
- astrocytoma
- brain tumors
- adult
- demography
- genes, p16
- genome
- glioma
- methylation
- o(6)-methylguanine-dna methyltransferase
- pathology, clinical
- pediatrics
- protein p16
- brain
- diagnosis
- histology
- neoplasms
- older adult
- epigenetics
- young adult
- alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome, nondeletion type, x-linked
- patient-focused outcomes
- tumor mutation burden
- clinical relevance