| Literature DB >> 36008825 |
Jon Foss-Skiftesvik1,2,3,4,5, Ulrik Kristoffer Stoltze6,7,8, Karin Wadt7, René Mathiasen6, Thomas van Overeem Hansen7,8, Lise Barlebo Ahlborn9, Erik Sørensen10, Sisse Rye Ostrowski8,10, Solvej Margrete Aldringer Kullegaard6, Adrian Otamendi Laspiur11, Linea Cecilie Melchior12, David Scheie12, Bjarne Winther Kristensen8,12,13, Jane Skjøth-Rasmussen14,8, Kjeld Schmiegelow6,8.
Abstract
Ependymoma is the second most common malignant brain tumor in children. The etiology is largely unknown and germline DNA sequencing studies focusing on childhood ependymoma are limited. We therefore performed germline whole-genome sequencing on a population-based cohort of children diagnosed with ependymoma in Denmark over the past 20 years (n = 43). Single nucleotide and structural germline variants in 457 cancer related genes and 2986 highly evolutionarily constrained genes were assessed in 37 children with normal tissue available for sequencing. Molecular ependymoma classification was performed using DNA methylation profiling for 39 children with available tumor tissue. Pathogenic germline variants in known cancer predisposition genes were detected in 11% (4/37; NF2, LZTR1, NF1 & TP53). However, DNA methylation profiling resulted in revision of the histopathological ependymoma diagnosis to non-ependymoma tumor types in 8% (3/39). This included the two children with pathogenic germline variants in TP53 and NF1 whose tumors were reclassified to a diffuse midline glioma and a rosette-forming glioneuronal tumor, respectively. Consequently, 50% (2/4) of children with pathogenic germline variants in fact had other tumor types. A meta-analysis combining our findings with pediatric pan-cancer germline sequencing studies showed an overall frequency of pathogenic germline variants of 3.4% (7/207) in children with ependymoma. In summary, less than 4% of childhood ependymoma is explained by genetic predisposition, virtually restricted to pathogenic variants in NF2 and NF1. For children with other cancer predisposition syndromes, diagnostic reconsideration is recommended for ependymomas without molecular classification. Additionally, LZTR1 is suggested as a novel putative ependymoma predisposition gene.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation profiling; Genetic susceptibility; Genomics; Molecular classification; Pediatrics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36008825 PMCID: PMC9404601 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-022-01429-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.578
Fig. 1Graphic overview of the cohort (n = 43 children) and methods employed
Patient clinical characteristics
| Patient characteristics | n (% of total) |
|---|---|
| Total | 43 (100%) |
| Median age at diagnosis, y (SD) | 5.3 (4.7) |
| Alive | 27 (62.8%) |
| Deceased | 16 (37.2%) |
| Female | 19 (44.2%) |
| Male | 24 (55.8%) |
| Retrospective | 34 (79.1%) |
| Prospective | 9 (20.9%) |
| Myxopapillary ependymoma, WHO 2 | 1 (2.3%) |
| Ependymoma, WHO 2 | 14 (32.6%) |
| Ependymoma, WHO 3 | 26 (60.5%) |
| Other* | 2 (4.7%) |
| Supratentorial | 7 (16.3%) |
| Posterior fossa | 30 (69.8%) |
| Spinal | 5 (11.6%) |
| Multifocal** | 1 (2.3%) |
*Includes one patient initially diagnosed with atypical glioblastoma for whom subsequent clinical tumor methylation profiling resulted in an ependymoma diagnosis and one patient with ependymoblastoma incorrectly registered as ependymoma
**Includes one patient with disseminated ependymoma at diagnosis with tumor tissue located adherent to the insular cortex, the ventral surface of the brainstem and the caudal spinal cord
SD, standard deviation; y, years; WHO, the World Health Organization histological grade
Fig. 2Sankey plot illustrating original histopathological diagnosis (left) for 43 children registered with ependymoma and corresponding tumor methylation class (right). CPS, cancer predisposition syndrome; ANA-EPN, ependymoma WHO 3; EPN, ependymoma WHO 2; MYX-EPN, myxopapillary ependymoma WHO 2; GBM, atypical glioblastoma with several differential diagnoses considered; where clinical methylation profiling resulted in alteration of the diagnosis; EBLASTOMA, ependymoblastoma incorrectly registered in the Danish Childhood Cancer Registry as ependymoma; NA, not available
Fig. 3Overview of resulting molecular tumor classification for the four patients with detected pathogenic germline variants
Overview of large (> 100 cases) pan-childhood cancer germline sequencing studies with reported findings for ependymoma
| Author, jr | Year | Patients w/pathogenic CPS gene variants (n/total (%)) | Comments | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full childhood cancer cohort | CNS subcohort | Ependymoma subcohort | |||
| Zhang, J (NEJM) | 2015 | 95/1120 (8.5%) | 21/245 (8.6%) | 4/67 (6.0%) | |
| Parsons, DW (JAMA Onc) | 2016 | 13/150 (8.7%) | 2/56 (3.6%) | 0/9 (0.0%) | |
| Oberg, JA (Genome Med) | 2016 | 18/101 (17.8%) | 5/17 (29.4%) | 2/3 (66.7%) | ACMG secondary findings in |
| Gröbner, SN (Nature) | 2018 | 69/914 (7.6%) | 39/542 (7.2%) | 0/59 (0.0%) | 14 cases are overlapping with Zhang et al. (incl. the patient w the reported |
| Wong, N (Nature Med) | 2020 | 40/247 (16.2%) | 17/92 (18.5%) | 0/8 (0.0%) | |
| Byrjaldsen, A (PLoS Gen) | 2020 | 29/198 (14.7%) | 3/44 (6.8%) | 0/4 (0.0%) | Ependymoma cases (n = 4) overlap with the current study |
| Fiala, EM (Nature Can) | 2021 | 138/751 (18.4%) | 30/143 (21.0%) | 3/14 (21.4%) | |
| Newmann, S (Cancer Discovery) | 2021 | 55/300 (18.3%) | 19/97 (19.6%) | 0/11 (0.0%) | |
| Stedingk, KV (Sci rep) | 2021 | 30/790 (3.8%) | 8/149 (5.4%) | 0/14 (0.0%) | Limited to SNV analysis |
| Wagener, R (EJHG) | 2021 | 11/160 (6.9%) | 3/32 (9.4%) | 0/2 (0.0%) | |
| Excl. ACMG secondary findings, 14 cases overlapping in Zhang et al./Gröbner et al. and the four cases reported by Byrjalsen et al. also in the current cohort | |||||
| Restricted to molecularly confirmed ependymoma | |||||
ACMG, American College of Medical Geneticists