| Literature DB >> 35402234 |
Bhuvic Patel1, Rupen Desai1, Sangami Pugazenthi1, Omar H Butt2,3, Jiayi Huang3,4, Albert H Kim1,3.
Abstract
Meningiomas are common primary central nervous system tumors derived from the meninges, with management most frequently entailing serial monitoring or a combination of surgery and/or radiation therapy. Although often considered benign lesions, meningiomas can not only be surgically inaccessible but also exhibit aggressive growth and recurrence. In such cases, adjuvant radiation and systemic therapy may be required for tumor control. In this review, we briefly describe the current WHO grading scale for meningioma and provide demonstrative cases of treatment-resistant meningiomas. We also summarize frequently observed molecular abnormalities and their correlation with intracranial location and recurrence rate. We then describe how genetic and epigenetic features might supplement or even replace histopathologic features for improved identification of aggressive lesions. Finally, we describe the role of surgery, radiotherapy, and ongoing systemic therapy as well as precision medicine clinical trials for the treatment of recurrent meningioma.Entities:
Keywords: CNS tumors; chemotherapy; immunotherapy; meningioma; radiation therapy; skull base surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35402234 PMCID: PMC8984123 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.851758
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Common intracranial locations of meningiomas highlighted in this review with associated DNA driver mutations or chromosomal loss (6, 14, 23, 24). Locations correlated to a generalized scale ranging from less (green) to more (red) complicated to resect and manage. Meningioma locations not pictured include clinoid, foramen magnum, cavernous sinus, suprasellar, and tentorial.
A comparative representation of studies describing molecular reclassification of meningiomas.
| Bayley et al, 2022 ( | Nassiri et al, 2021 ( | Maas et al, 2021 ( | ||||||||
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| MenG A | MenG B | MenG C | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | Group 4 | Subtype 1 (Low) | Subtype 2 (Int) | Subtype 3 (High) | |
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| N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | ||||||
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Within each classification scheme, meningioma subgroups are ordered from left to right based on increasingly worse progression free survival. Genetic mutations and chromosomal losses were compared across each subgroup with black shading indicating predominant mutation/loss in that group, empty cell indicating that the mutation/loss was tested for but was not present or significantly less predominant in that group, and N/A indicating that the mutation/loss was not tested for or not reported in that study.
Comparison of contemporary aggressive meningioma prognostication.
| Driver Classification ( | Maas Classification ( | RTOG 0539 ( | WHO 2021 ( | |
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| 1p | ||||
| 3p | ||||
| 4p/q | ||||
| 6p/q | ||||
| 10p/q | ||||
| 14q | ||||
| 18p/q | ||||
| 19p/q | ||||
| CDKN2A/B | ||||
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| 4 to 19 | ||||
| >20 | ||||
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| GTR | ||||
| STR | ||||
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| 0-25 cc | ||||
| >25cc | ||||
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| rimary | ||||
| Recurrent | ||||
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| 1 | ||||
| 2 | ||||
| 3 | ||||
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| Ben | ||||
| Int | ||||
| Mal | ||||
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| SMARCE1 | ||||
| BAP1 | ||||
| KLF/TRAF7 | ||||
| TERT | ||||
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Key factors of four contemporary meningioma grading schemata, including genetic and epigenetic alterations, histologic characteristics, and clinical characteristics, are compared. Within each classification scheme, black shading indicates use of the factor in the prognostication score.