| Literature DB >> 31139698 |
Otília Menyhárt1,2, Balázs Győrffy1,2.
Abstract
SHH-activated medulloblastomas (SHH-MB) account for 25-30% of all medulloblastomas (MB) and occur with a bimodal age distribution, encompassing many infant and adult, but fewer childhood cases. Different age groups are characterized by distinct survival outcomes and age-specific alterations of regulatory pathways. Here, we review SHH-specific genetic aberrations and signaling pathways. Over 95% of SHH-MBs contain at least one driver event - the activating mutations frequently affect sonic hedgehog signaling (PTCH1, SMO, SUFU), genome maintenance (TP53), and chromatin modulation (KMT2D, KMT2C, HAT complexes), while genes responsible for transcriptional regulation (MYCN) are recurrently amplified. SHH-MBs have the highest prevalence of damaging germline mutations among all MBs. TP53-mutant MBs are enriched among older children and have the worst prognosis among all SHH-MBs. Numerous genetic aberrations, including mutations of TERT, DDX3X, and the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway are almost exclusive to adult patients. We elaborate on the newest development within the evolution of molecular subclassification, and compare proposed risk categories across emerging classification systems. We discuss discoveries based on preclinical models and elaborate on the applicability of potential new therapies, including BET bromodomain inhibitors, statins, inhibitors of SMO, AURK, PLK, cMET, targeting stem-like cells, and emerging immunotherapeutic strategies. An enormous amount of data on the genetic background of SHH-MB have accumulated, nevertheless, subgroup affiliation does not provide reliable prediction about response to therapy. Emerging subtypes within SHH-MB offer more layered risk stratifications. Rational clinical trial designs with the incorporation of available molecular knowledge are inevitable. Improved collaboration across the scientific community will be imperative for therapeutic breakthroughs.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31139698 PMCID: PMC6529984 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.762
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Figure 1Age‐specific distribution of childhood medulloblastomas. (A) Infants, children, and adults are represented differently within each medulloblastoma subgroup. (B) Dominant mutations across three different age groups in SHH‐activated medulloblastomas (SHH‐MB). (C) Schematic representation of major mechanisms most frequently affected by somatic alterations contributing to SHH‐MB development.
Identifying subgroup affiliation in childhood medulloblastomas
| WNT | SHH | Group 3 | Group 4 | Source | Comments | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IHC | Nuclear | GAB1 | FFPE | Least robust: nuclear |
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| DKK1 | SFRP1 | NPR3 | KCNA1 | FFPE |
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| Gene expression | WIF1, DKK2, TNC, CCDC46, PYGL | BCHE, GLI1, ITIH2, MICAL1, PDLIM3, PTCH2, RAB33A, SFRP1 | n/a | n/a | Frozen | 13‐gene multiplex mRNA expression assay |
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| n/a | GLI1, SPHK1, SHROOM2, PDLIM3, OTX2 | n/a | n/a | Fresh frozen and FFPE |
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| WIF1, DKK2, TNC, GAD1, EMX2 | PDLIM3, EYA1, HHIP, ATOH1, SFRP1 | IMPG2, GABRA5, EGFL11, NRL, MAB21L2, NPR3 | KCNA1, EOMES, KHDRBS2, RBM24, UNC5D, OAS1 | FFPE |
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| Mutation | CTNNB1 exon 3 |
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| Structural aberrations | Chromosome 6 monosomy (FISH or DNA copy number array) |
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| Methylation | Illumina Infinium HumanMethylation 450 BeadChip array | Fresh frozen and FFPE | Also for copy number profiling |
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Figure 2Risk stratification of SHH‐activated medulloblastomas including prognostic biomarker candidates across all age groups as defined by Ramaswamy et al. (2016) (A), Schwalbe et al. (2017) (B) and Cavalli et al. (2017) (C).
Figure 3Sonic hedgehog signaling is crucial during normal development of cerebellum, and its dysregulation leads to medulloblastoma development. Mutations of , and or amplification of contribute to downstream activation of Hedgehog signaling targets. Several small molecule inhibitors of , such as sonidegib (LDE‐225) or vismodegib (GDC‐0449), are being investigated as potential targeted therapies in clinical trials. Mutations downstream of render such inhibitors ineffective. Itraconazole has the ability to inhibit activation including some mutations that confer resistance to inhibitors, and arsenic trioxide inhibits ciliary accumulation.