| Literature DB >> 36163281 |
Krskova Lenka1,2, Zapotocky Michal3,4, Misove Adela1,5, Vicha Ales1,5, Broz Petr5,2, Vanova Katerina1,5, Sumerauer David1,5, Stolova Lucie5, Sramkova Lucie5, Koblizek Miroslav1,2, Zamecnik Josef1,2, Kyncl Martin6, Holubova Zuzana6, Liby Petr7, Taborsky Jakub7, Benes Vladimir7, Pernikova Ivana8, Jones T W David9,10, Sill Martin11, Stancokova Terezia12.
Abstract
Gliomas are the most common central nervous tumors in children and adolescents. However, spinal cord low-grade gliomas (sLGGs) are rare, with scarce information on tumor genomics and epigenomics. To define the molecular landscape of sLGGs, we integrated clinical data, histology, and multi-level genetic and epigenetic analyses on a consecutive cohort of 26 pediatric patients. Driver molecular alteration was found in 92% of patients (24/26). A novel variant of KIAA1549:BRAF fusion (ex10:ex9) was identified using RNA-seq in four cases. Importantly, only one-third of oncogenic drivers could be revealed using standard diagnostic methods, and two-thirds of pediatric patients with sLGGs required extensive molecular examination. The majority (23/24) of detected alterations were potentially druggable targets. Four patients in our cohort received targeted therapy with MEK or NTRK inhibitors. Three of those exhibited clinical improvement (two with trametinib, one with larotrectinib), and two patients achieved partial response. Methylation profiling was implemented to further refine the diagnosis and revealed intertumoral heterogeneity in sLGGs. Although 55% of tumors clustered with pilocytic astrocytoma, other rare entities were identified in this patient population. In particular, diffuse leptomeningeal glioneuronal tumors (n = 3) and high-grade astrocytoma with piloid features (n = 1) and pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (n = 1) were present. A proportion of tumors (14%) had no match with the current version of the classifier. Complex molecular genetic sLGGs characterization was invaluable to refine diagnosis, which has proven to be essential in such a rare tumor entity. Moreover, identifying a high proportion of drugable targets in sLGGs opened an opportunity for new treatment modalities.Entities:
Keywords: KIAA1549:BRAF fusion; Low-grade glioma; Methylation profiling; NTRK fusion; Spinal cord
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36163281 PMCID: PMC9513869 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-022-01446-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.578
Fig. 1a Overview of the total number of 42 spinal cord tumors diagnosed within 2000–2021. b Pie of pie demonstrates three molecular alteration groups in sLGGs; tumors driven with canonical BRAF fusions, non-canonical BRAF fusions, and non-BRAF alterations. c Oncoplot summarizes the relation of demographic (sex, age), clinical (progression, survival), and molecular-pathology data (histology, driver alteration, CDKN2A status), d Comparison of the molecular alterations, anatomical location, and extent of the tumors. The position of vertical lines shows the anatomical location of the tumor and the length of vertical lines outlines the levels of the spinal cord affected by each tumor sample. Molecular subtypes are shown in colors. On the left side are displayed common KIAA1549:BRAF fusions (pink) in contrast with the right side where are rare KIAA1549:BRAF fusions (yellow), a novel type of KIAA1549:BRAF fusion (red), non-KIAA1549:BRAF fusions (green) and non-BRAF alterations (blue)
Fig. 2a Novel KIAA1549:BRAF fusion variant—ex9:ex10. The diagram shows an in-frame fusion gene incorporating the kinase domain of BRAF oncogene. b MRI images demonstrate similarities in the anatomical location of sLGGs in patients with detected novel KIAA1549:BRAF ex9:ex10 fusion variant. Tumors are delineated with green line
Fig. 3T-SNE plot demonstrates the intertumoral heterogeneity among sLGGs. Prague samples (large red dots) are displayed among cases relevant methylation classes. This figure displays a close-up of the t-SNE with the whole reference cohort (see Additional file 4: Fig S2)
Fig. 4Kaplan Meier survival analysis. a PFS and OS of the cohort. b Significantly worse PFS 37.5% (CI 95%, 16.2–86.8%) of younger children compared to PFS 85.9% (CI 95%, 69.5 to 100%) in older children (p < 0.001)
Fig. 5Radiological response to the targeted therapies. The white line (a.1) indicates tumor volume before initiation of NTRK inhibitor in patients sLGG_22, and (a.2) shows a 40% tumor volume reduction after 54 days of therapy. Likewise, the white line (b.1) shows tumor volume before initiation of MEK inhibitor in patient sLGG_07, and (b.2) shows a 61% tumor volume reduction after eight months of therapy