| Literature DB >> 31563982 |
Annika K Wefers1,2,3, Damian Stichel4,5, Daniel Schrimpf4,5, Roland Coras6, Mélanie Pages7, Arnault Tauziède-Espariat7, Pascale Varlet7, Daniel Schwarz8,9, Figen Söylemezoglu10, Ute Pohl11,12, José Pimentel13,14, Jochen Meyer4,5, Ekkehard Hewer15, Anna Japp16, Abhijit Joshi17, David E Reuss4,5, Annekathrin Reinhardt4,5, Philipp Sievers4,5, M Belén Casalini4,5, Azadeh Ebrahimi4,5, Kristin Huang4,5, Christian Koelsche4,18, Hu Liang Low19, Olinda Rebelo20, Dina Marnoto20, Albert J Becker16, Ori Staszewski21, Michel Mittelbronn22,23,24,25,26, Martin Hasselblatt27, Jens Schittenhelm28,29, Edmund Cheesman30, Ricardo Santos de Oliveira31, Rosane Gomes P Queiroz32, Elvis Terci Valera32, Volkmar H Hans33,34, Andrey Korshunov4,5, Adriana Olar35,36, Keith L Ligon37, Stefan M Pfister38,39,40, Zane Jaunmuktane41,42, Sebastian Brandner42,43, Ruth G Tatevossian44, David W Ellison44, Thomas S Jacques45, Mrinalini Honavar46, Eleonora Aronica47, Maria Thom41, Felix Sahm4,5,38, Andreas von Deimling4,5, David T W Jones38,48, Ingmar Blumcke6, David Capper49,50.
Abstract
The "isomorphic subtype of diffuse astrocytoma" was identified histologically in 2004 as a supratentorial, highly differentiated glioma with low cellularity, low proliferation and focal diffuse brain infiltration. Patients typically had seizures since childhood and all were operated on as adults. To define the position of these lesions among brain tumours, we histologically, molecularly and clinically analysed 26 histologically prototypical isomorphic diffuse gliomas. Immunohistochemically, they were GFAP-positive, MAP2-, OLIG2- and CD34-negative, nuclear ATRX-expression was retained and proliferation was low. All 24 cases sequenced were IDH-wildtype. In cluster analyses of DNA methylation data, isomorphic diffuse gliomas formed a group clearly distinct from other glial/glio-neuronal brain tumours and normal hemispheric tissue, most closely related to paediatric MYB/MYBL1-altered diffuse astrocytomas and angiocentric gliomas. Half of the isomorphic diffuse gliomas had copy number alterations of MYBL1 or MYB (13/25, 52%). Gene fusions of MYBL1 or MYB with various gene partners were identified in 11/22 (50%) and were associated with an increased RNA-expression of the respective MYB-family gene. Integrating copy number alterations and available RNA sequencing data, 20/26 (77%) of isomorphic diffuse gliomas demonstrated MYBL1 (54%) or MYB (23%) alterations. Clinically, 89% of patients were seizure-free after surgery and all had a good outcome. In summary, we here define a distinct benign tumour class belonging to the family of MYB/MYBL1-altered gliomas. Isomorphic diffuse glioma occurs both in children and adults, has a concise morphology, frequent MYBL1 and MYB alterations and a specific DNA methylation profile. As an exclusively histological diagnosis may be very challenging and as paediatric MYB/MYBL1-altered diffuse astrocytomas may have the same gene fusions, we consider DNA methylation profiling very helpful for their identification.Entities:
Keywords: Epilepsy; Gene fusion; Glioma; Isomorphic diffuse glioma; MYB; MYBL1
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31563982 PMCID: PMC7477753 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-019-02078-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088