| Literature DB >> 34661724 |
David Capper1,2, M Beatriz Lopes3, Simone Schmid4, David A Solomon5, Eilis Perez6, Anne Thieme6,7, Bette K Kleinschmidt-DeMasters8, Caterina Giannini9, Annekathrin Reinhardt10,11, Sylvia L Asa12,13, Ozgur Mete13, Damian Stichel11, Christin Siewert7, Carsten Dittmayer6, Martin Hasselblatt14, Werner Paulus14, Christoph Nagel15, Patrick N Harter16,17,18,19, Jens Schittenhelm20,21, Jürgen Honegger22, Elisabeth Rushing23, Roland Coras24, Stefan M Pfister25,26,27, Rolf Buslei28, Arend Koch6, Arie Perry5, David T W Jones25,29, Andreas von Deimling10,11.
Abstract
Pituicytoma (PITUI), granular cell tumor (GCT), and spindle cell oncocytoma (SCO) are rare tumors of the posterior pituitary. Histologically, they may be challenging to distinguish and have been proposed to represent a histological spectrum of a single entity. We performed targeted next-generation sequencing, DNA methylation profiling, and copy number analysis on 47 tumors (14 PITUI; 12 GCT; 21 SCO) to investigate molecular features and explore possibilities of clinically meaningful tumor subclassification. We detected two main epigenomic subgroups by unsupervised clustering of DNA methylation data, though the overall methylation differences were subtle. The largest group (n = 23) contained most PITUIs and a subset of SCOs and was enriched for pathogenic mutations within genes in the MAPK/PI3K pathways (12/17 [71%] of sequenced tumors: FGFR1 (3), HRAS (3), BRAF (2), NF1 (2), CBL (1), MAP2K2 (1), PTEN (1)) and two with accompanying TERT promoter mutation. The second group (n = 16) contained most GCTs and a subset of SCOs, all of which mostly lacked identifiable genetic drivers. Outcome analysis demonstrated that the presence of chromosomal imbalances was significantly associated with reduced progression-free survival especially within the combined PITUI and SCO group (p = 0.031). In summary, we observed only subtle DNA methylation differences between posterior pituitary tumors, indicating that these tumors may be best classified as subtypes of a single entity. Nevertheless, our data indicate differences in mutation patterns and clinical outcome. For a clinically meaningful subclassification, we propose a combined histo-molecular approach into three subtypes: one subtype is defined by granular cell histology, scarcity of identifiable oncogenic mutations, and favorable outcome. The other two subtypes have either SCO or PITUI histology but are segregated by chromosomal copy number profile into a favorable group (no copy number changes) and a less favorable group (copy number imbalances present). Both of the latter groups have recurrent MAPK/PI3K genetic alterations that represent potential therapeutic targets.Entities:
Keywords: Brain tumor; Granular cell tumor; Molecular neuropathology; Pituicytoma; Posterior pituitary gland neoplasms; Spindle cell oncocytoma
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34661724 PMCID: PMC8568760 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-021-02377-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Representative hematoxylin and eosin stained images illustrating the histomorphological spectrum of the different posterior pituitary tumor entities. Granular cell tumors typically present with polygonal cells, granular cytoplasm and small eccentric nuclei (a). Pituicytomas typically present with predominantly spindled cells lacking granular or oncocytic changes (b). Spindle cell oncocytomas have more variable histological appearances; prototypical specimens show storiform or fascicular growth (c). Some degree of granular cytoplasmic changes was observed among spindle cell oncocytomas of this series. Some samples showed only focal granular cytoplasm (c) whereas those changes were prominent in other tumors (d). Some tumors presented with morphological features such as high cell density, lobulated growth pattern (e), pleomorphic nuclei, or epithelioid cytology (f). Original magnification of all images 400×, inset 800×
Fig. 2Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of DNA methylation data in comparison to clinical and molecular data. The analysis indicates two main methylation groups, one small group, and four undefined cases. The largest group is enriched for spindle cell oncocytomas and pituicytomas and strongly enriched for mutations of the MAPK/PI3K pathway (MAPK/PI3K group, red). The 2nd largest group is enriched for granular cell tumors (Granular group, green). This group shows a paucity of copy number changes and rare oncogenic mutations. A small group consists of four cases with high numbers of copy number changes and frequent epigenetic regulator mutations (CNV high group, grey). RTx radiotherapy, UND undefined, CNV copy number variation, PITUI pituicytoma, GCT granular cell tumor, SCO spindle cell oncocytoma
Likely pathogenic single nucleotide variants and indels identified in the 37 posterior pituitary tumors analyzed by targeted next-generation DNA sequencing
| Histologic type | Case ID | Detected genomic variant |
|---|---|---|
| Granular cell tumor | 1 | None |
| 2 | None | |
| 3 | None | |
| 5 | None | |
| 6 | None | |
| 7 | None# | |
| 8 | None# | |
| 10 | None | |
| 11 | DNMT3A c.2408 + 2 T > G | |
| 12 | None | |
| Pituicytoma | 13 | NF1 p.S2549*, NF1 p.R997fs |
| 15 | FGFR1 p.N546K, DNMT3A p.P256fs, TERT c.-124C > T | |
| 18 | None | |
| 20 | None | |
| 22 | CBL p.Y371C | |
| 23 | None | |
| 24 | FGFR1 p.N546K | |
| 25 | HRAS p.Q61R | |
| 26 | HRAS p.Q61K, TERT c.-124C > T | |
| Spindle cell oncocytoma | 29 | FGFR1 p.K656E |
| 30 | MAP2K2 p.F57I, PTEN p.0? | |
| 31 | NF1 p.H389Y | |
| 33 | SMARCB1 p.A163fs | |
| 34 | CBL p.P495Q, EZH2 p.Y646N | |
| 36 | None | |
| 37 | None | |
| 38 | None | |
| 39 | BRAF p.V600E, TP53 p.V218E | |
| 41 | BRAF p.V600E, DNMT3A p.P904L, KMT2D p.V1674fs | |
| 42 | ||
| 43 | CREBBP p.S318_V319delins* | |
| 45 | EP300 p.M136fs | |
| 47 | None | |
| 35 | None | |
| 40 | None | |
| 46 | None | |
| 28 | None |
Potentially pathogenic variants are written in italics
#Low sequencing coverage was obtained for these samples that may have impeded the ability to detect pathogenic mutations in genes targeted for sequencing
SCOs clustering with granular DNA methylation group
Fig. 3Depiction of t distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (tSNE) of selected groups of the brain tumor classifier cohort [7] together with the cases of this series. The tumors of this study all group together closely and separate well from the other included groups, in particular from other TTF1-positive glioma types. Two cases (case 27 and 28) fall slightly to the side together with two cases of other groups. (see Supplementary Fig. 1). PITUI pituicytoma, GCT granular cell tumor, SCO spindle cell oncocytoma, SEGA subependymal giant cell astrocytoma, CHGL chordoid glioma of the third ventricle, PA pilocytic astrocytoma, PITAD pituitary adenoma, CHORDM chordoma, HMB hemangioblastoma, MNG meningioma, SFT HMPC solitary fibrous tumor/hemangiopericytoma, SCHW schwannoma, SCHW MEL melanotic schwannoma (a). tSNE plots based on Pearson correlation distance matrix of posterior pituitary tumors illustrates a slight separation of granular tumors in the lower left from pituicytomas and spindle cell oncocytomas on the right (b). When the NGS data is overlaid, the MAPK/PI3K pathway and epigenetic regulator mutations predominantly occurred in the large group dominated by spindle cell oncocytomas and pituicytomas (c). When overlaid with the copy number information (c), it was evident that most cases with high rates of copy number changes grouped together and that the cases with high copy number load were partially the same cases later showing recurrence (c) Missing data is indicated by open circles
Fig. 4Illustration of the stability of copy number changes within a selected sample (case 47, 10 CNVs) with four distinct morphological areas. Copy number changes are identical in all four areas (a). Illustration of copy number plots of three cases with tissue from two or more operation time points (b–d). In two of the cases single chromosomal changes were gained or lost over time, whereas most aberrations remained stable
Fig. 5Kaplan–Meier analysis of progression free survival. Analysis stratified by central histological diagnosis. Spindle cell oncocytomas relapsed more frequently and earlier compared to the two other groups. Statistical significance was not reached for spindle cell oncocytoma vs pituicytoma (p = 0.21) or for the other groups (a). Analysis according to DNA methylation subgroups shows shorter progression free survival for CNV high group vs. the MAPK/PI3K group (p = 0.011) with the granular group being in-between these two (not significant) (b). Grouping of all posterior pituitary tumors according to presence of copy number alterations (i.e. any chromosomal gains or losses) showed that tumors with any copy number variation had shorter progression free survival (p = 0.0071) (c). Analysis according to presence of any mutation of MAPK/PI3K pathway vs no detected mutation did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.89) (d)
Fig. 6A sankey plot for re-grouping of the posterior pituitary tumors of this series in the 3 suggested subtypes shows mainly shifting of 8 spindle cell oncocytomas without CNV to subtype 1 and shifting of 6 pituicytomas with CNV to subtype 2 (a). Kaplan–Meier analysis of progression free survival stratified by the three proposed subtypes shows improved separation compared to stratification based on histologic diagnosis (b)
Fig.7Pictogram summarizing the relation of histological groups, mutation frequencies, chromosomal imbalances, and outcome of the three suggested histomolecular subtypes