| Literature DB >> 31104347 |
Sean P Ferris1, Jose Velazquez Vega2, Mariam Aboian3, Julieann C Lee1, Jessica Van Ziffle1,4, Courtney Onodera1,4, James P Grenert1,4, Tara Saunders1, Yunn-Yi Chen1, Anu Banerjee5, Cassie N Kline5,6, Nalin Gupta7, Corey Raffel7, David Samuel8, Irune Ruiz-Diaz9, Shino Magaki10, Dianne Wilson11, Janna Neltner11, Zahra Al-Hajri12, Joanna J Phillips1,7, Melike Pekmezci1, Andrew W Bollen1, Tarik Tihan1, Matthew Schniederjan2, Soonmee Cha3, Arie Perry1,7, David A Solomon1,4.
Abstract
High-grade neuroepithelial tumor with BCOR exon 15 internal tandem duplication (HGNET BCOR ex15 ITD) is a recently proposed tumor entity of the central nervous system (CNS) with a distinct methylation profile and characteristic genetic alteration. The complete spectrum of histologic features, accompanying genetic alterations, clinical outcomes, and optimal treatment for this new tumor entity are largely unknown. Here, we performed a comprehensive assessment of 10 new cases of HGNET BCOR ex15 ITD. The tumors mostly occurred in young children and were located in the cerebral or cerebellar hemispheres. On imaging all tumors were large, well-circumscribed, heterogeneous masses with variable enhancement and reduced diffusion. They were histologically characterized by predominantly solid growth, glioma-like fibrillarity, perivascular pseudorosettes, and palisading necrosis, but absence of microvascular proliferation. They demonstrated sparse to absent GFAP expression, no synaptophysin expression, variable OLIG2 and NeuN positivity, and diffuse strong BCOR nuclear positivity. While BCOR exon 15 internal tandem duplication was the solitary pathogenic alteration identified in six cases, four cases contained additional alterations including CDKN2A/B homozygous deletion, TERT amplification or promoter hotspot mutation, and damaging mutations in TP53, BCORL1, EP300, SMARCA2 and STAG2. While the limited clinical follow-up in prior reports had indicated a uniformly dismal prognosis for this tumor entity, this cohort includes multiple long-term survivors. Our study further supports inclusion of HGNET BCOR ex15 ITD as a distinct CNS tumor entity and expands the known clinicopathologic, radiographic, and genetic features.Entities:
Keywords: BCOR exon 15 internal tandem duplication; HGNET; brain tumor; high-grade neuroepithelial tumor; molecular neuro-oncology; molecular neuropathology
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31104347 PMCID: PMC6859193 DOI: 10.1111/bpa.12747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Pathol ISSN: 1015-6305 Impact factor: 7.611