| Literature DB >> 24523595 |
Kristin Schroeder1, Sri Gururangan1.
Abstract
Medulloblastoma is the commonest malignant brain tumor in children. Treatment with surgery, irradiation, and chemotherapy has improved outcomes in recent years, but patients are frequently left with devastating neurocognitive and other sequelae following such therapy. While the prognosis has traditionally been based on conventional histopathology and clinical staging (based on age, extent of resection, and presence or absence of metastasis), it has become apparent in recent years that the inherent biology of the tumor plays a significant part in predicting survival and sometimes supersedes clinical or pathologic risk factors. The advent of deep sequencing gene technology has provided invaluable clues to the molecular makeup of this tumor and allowed neuro-oncologists to understand that medulloblastoma is an amalgamation of several distinct disease entities with unique clinical associations and behavior. This review is a concise summary of the pathology, genetic syndromes, recent advances in molecular subgrouping, and the associated gene mutations and copy number variations in medulloblastoma. The association of molecular alterations with patient prognosis is also discussed, but it should be remembered that further validation is required in prospective clinical trials utilizing uniform treatment approaches.Entities:
Keywords: adults; children; medulloblastoma; molecular subgroups; mutations
Year: 2014 PMID: 24523595 PMCID: PMC3921827 DOI: 10.2147/PGPM.S38698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmgenomics Pers Med ISSN: 1178-7066
Pathologic subtypes of medulloblastoma
| Pathologic subtype | Histologic appearance | Prognosis (% overall survival at 5 years) |
|---|---|---|
| Classic (71%) | Sheets of uniform small cells with high nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio and round hyperchromatic nuclei. Focal neural differentiation is present in a minority. | WNT subgroup (>95%) |
| Nodular/desmoplastic (5%) | Heterogeneous architecture with regions of dense intercellular reticulin and nodules containing tumor cells with a neuronal phenotype and decreased growth fraction. | Infants and children (80%) |
| Large cell/anaplastic (17%) | Anaplastic tumors have marked pleomorphism, nuclear molding, cell-cell wrapping, and high mitotic activity. | Group 3 (<50%) |
Abbreviations: WNT, wingless; SHH, sonic hedgehog; DMEN, desmoplastic medulloblastoma with excessive nodularity.
Clinical and molecular characteristics of subgroups of medulloblastoma
| WNT (~10%) | SHH (~30%) | Group 3 (~25%) | Group 4 (~35%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex ratio | 1:1 | 1.5:1 | 2:1 | 3:1 |
| Age distribution | Older children | Infants, children, adults | Mostly infants | Older children and young adults |
| Histology | Classic; very rarely LCA | Classic >nodular/desmoplastic >LCA >MBEN | Classic >LCA | Classic; rarely LCA |
| Metastasis at diagnosis | 5%–10% | 15%–20% | 40%–45% | 35%–40% |
| Overall survival | ~95% | ~75% | ~50% | ~75% |
| Proposed cell of origin | Lower rhombic lip progenitor cells | CGNP of the EGL and cochlear nucleus | Prominin-1+, lineage− neural stem cells; CGNPs of the EGL | Unknown |
| Cytogenetic | 6− | 3q+ 9p+ 9q− 10q− 14q− 17p− | 1q+ 7+ 17q+ 18+ 8− 10q− 11− 16q− 17p− | 4+ 7+ 17q+ 18+ 8− 10− 11− 17p− X− |
| Driver genes | ||||
| Expression signature | WNT signaling | SHH signaling | Neuronal signature | |
Note: Adapted with permission from Macmillan Publishers Limited: Nat Rev Cancer. Northcott PA, Jones DT, Kool M, et al. Medulloblastomics: the end of the beginning. Nat Rev Cancer. 2012;12:818–834.27 Copyright © 2012.
Abbreviations: WNT, wingless; SHH, Sonic Hedgehog; LCA, large cell/anaplastic; MBEN, medulloblastoma with excessive nodularity; CGNP, cerebellar granular neuron precursor; EGL, external granular layer.
Clinical and biologic characteristics of infant and adult SHH medulloblastoma
| Infant SHH medulloblastoma | Adult SHH medulloblastoma | |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | Males = females | Male predominance |
| Age | <4 years | >16 years |
| Tumor location | Vermis | Cerebellar hemispheres |
| Metastasis at diagnosis | Frequently metastatic | Frequently localized |
| Overall survival (5-year) | 85% | 80% |
| Survival by histology | Desmoplastic > classic | No difference |
| Survival by M0 versus M+ | No difference | M0 >M+ |
| Survival by 10q loss (+ or −) | No difference | 10q loss+ < 10q loss− |
| Survival by GLi2 amp (+ or −) | No difference | GLI2 amp+ <GLI2 amp− |
| Gene enrichment | extracellular matrix | |
| Cytogenetics |
Note: With kind permission from Springer Science+Business Media: Acta Neuropathol. Pediatric and adult sonic hedgehog medulloblastomas are clinically and molecularly distinct, volume 122, 2011, page 238, Northcott PA, Hielscher T, Dubuc A, et al, Table 3.46 Copyright © 2011.
Abbreviation: SHH, Sonic Hedgehog.