| Literature DB >> 32303840 |
Gourish Mondal1, Julieann C Lee1, Ajay Ravindranathan1, Javier E Villanueva-Meyer2, Quynh T Tran3, Sariah J Allen3, Jairo Barreto1, Rohit Gupta1, Pamela Doo4, Jessica Van Ziffle1,5, Courtney Onodera1,5, Patrick Devine1,5, James P Grenert1,5, David Samuel6, Rong Li7, Laura K Metrock8, Lee-Way Jin9, Reuben Antony10, Mouied Alashari11, Samuel Cheshier12, Nicholas S Whipple13, Carol Bruggers13, Corey Raffel14, Nalin Gupta14, Cassie N Kline15,16, Alyssa Reddy16, Anu Banerjee15, Matthew D Hall17, Minesh P Mehta17, Ziad Khatib18, Ossama M Maher18, Carole Brathwaite19, Melike Pekmezci1, Joanna J Phillips1,14, Andrew W Bollen1, Tarik Tihan1, John T Lucas20, Alberto Broniscer21, Mitchel S Berger14, Arie Perry1,14, Brent A Orr3, David A Solomon22,23.
Abstract
Brain tumors are the most common solid tumors of childhood, and the genetic drivers and optimal therapeutic strategies for many of the different subtypes remain unknown. Here, we identify that bithalamic gliomas harbor frequent mutations in the EGFR oncogene, only rare histone H3 mutation (in contrast to their unilateral counterparts), and a distinct genome-wide DNA methylation profile compared to all other glioma subtypes studied to date. These EGFR mutations are either small in-frame insertions within exon 20 (intracellular tyrosine kinase domain) or missense mutations within exon 7 (extracellular ligand-binding domain) that occur in the absence of accompanying gene amplification. We find these EGFR mutations are oncogenic in primary astrocyte models and confer sensitivity to specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors dependent on location within the kinase domain or extracellular domain. We initiated treatment with targeted kinase inhibitors in four children whose tumors harbor EGFR mutations with encouraging results. This study identifies a promising genomically-tailored therapeutic strategy for bithalamic gliomas, a lethal and genetically distinct brain tumor of childhood.Entities:
Keywords: Afatinib; Bithalamic glioma; Diffuse midline glioma; EGFR; Erlotinib; Histone H3; Molecular neuropathology; Osimertinib; Pediatric cancer; Trametinib; Tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32303840 PMCID: PMC7792550 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-020-02155-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088