| Literature DB >> 33194592 |
Giovanni Brigliadori1, Giulia Goffredo1, Daniela Bartolini2, Luigino Tosatto3, Lorena Gurrieri4, Laura Mercatali4, Toni Ibrahim4.
Abstract
Glioblastoma is the most aggressive tumor of the central nervous system. Prognosis is poor, even in the presence of a methylated state of MGMT gene promoter, which represents the biomarker with the highest prognostic/predictive value for the standard treatment of patients. Among patients with a methylated MGMT status, we identified an intermediate range of methylation above the standard 9% cut-off (gray zone) in which the predictive strength of the marker was lost. In an effort to improve the evaluation of the biomarker in clinical decision-making, we are carrying out a retrospective study, performing an in-depth analysis of samples used for diagnosis to understand how molecular heterogeneity, a hallmark of glioblastoma, impacts the evaluation of MGMT gene promoter methylation. Preliminary data from samples belonging to the "gray zone" tend to confirm the hypothesis of a mismatch between methylation values used for clinical decision-making and those included in our in-depth analysis. Confirmation of these data would help to better define the predictive power of MGMT promoter methylation status and greatly facilitate clinical decision-making.Entities:
Keywords: MGMT methylation; glioblastoma; intratumor heterogeneity; predictivity; temozolamide
Year: 2020 PMID: 33194592 PMCID: PMC7606920 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.533000
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Study design, unmethylated, highly and medium methylated samples. (A) Study design: MGMT promoter methylation analysis. (B) “unmethylated” sample-2% - and subsections. (C) “highly methylated” sample-43% - and subsections. (D) “medium methylated” sample-29% - and subsections. (E) “medium methylated” sample-24% - and subsections.
Figure 2Low and medium methylated samples. (A) “low methylated” sample-15% - and subsections. (B) “low methylated” sample-15% - and subsections. (C) “medium methylated” sample-21% - and subsections. (D) “medium methylated” sample-22% - and subsections. (E) “medium methylated” sample-23% - and subsections. (F) “medium methylated” sample-27% - and subsections.