337 results on '"McLendon RE"'
Search Results
2. Very low mutation burden is a feature of inflamed recurrent glioblastomas responsive to cancer immunotherapy
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Gromeier, M, Brown, MC, Zhang, G, Lin, X, Chen, Y, Wei, Z, Beaubier, N, Yan, H, He, Y, Desjardins, A, Herndon, JE, Varn, FS, Verhaak, RG, Zhao, J, Bolognesi, DP, Friedman, AH, Friedman, HS, McSherry, F, Muscat, AM, Lipp, ES, Nair, SK, Khasraw, Mustafa, Peters, KB, Randazzo, D, Sampson, JH, McLendon, RE, Bigner, DD, Ashley, David, Gromeier, M, Brown, MC, Zhang, G, Lin, X, Chen, Y, Wei, Z, Beaubier, N, Yan, H, He, Y, Desjardins, A, Herndon, JE, Varn, FS, Verhaak, RG, Zhao, J, Bolognesi, DP, Friedman, AH, Friedman, HS, McSherry, F, Muscat, AM, Lipp, ES, Nair, SK, Khasraw, Mustafa, Peters, KB, Randazzo, D, Sampson, JH, McLendon, RE, Bigner, DD, and Ashley, David
- Abstract
Several immunotherapy clinical trials in recurrent glioblastoma have reported long-term survival benefits in 10–20% of patients. Here we perform genomic analysis of tumor tissue from recurrent WHO grade IV glioblastoma patients acquired prior to immunotherapy intervention. We report that very low tumor mutation burden is associated with longer survival after recombinant polio virotherapy or after immune checkpoint blockade in recurrent glioblastoma patients. A relationship between tumor mutation burden and survival is not observed in cohorts of immunotherapy naïve newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma patients. Transcriptomic analyses reveal an inverse relationship between tumor mutation burden and enrichment of inflammatory gene signatures in cohorts of recurrent, but not newly diagnosed glioblastoma tumors, implying that a relationship between tumor mutation burden and tumor-intrinsic inflammation evolves upon recurrence.
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- 2021
3. Clinical Outcomes and Patient-Matched Molecular Composition of Relapsed Medulloblastoma
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Kumar, R, Smith, KS, Deng, M, Terhune, C, Robinson, GW, Orr, BA, Liu, APY, Lin, T, Billups, CA, Chintagumpala, M, Bowers, DC, Hassall, TE, Hansford, JR, Khuong-Quang, DA, Crawford, JR, Bendel, AE, Gururangan, S, Schroeder, K, Bouffet, E, Bartels, U, Fisher, MJ, Cohn, R, Partap, S, Kellie, SJ, McCowage, G, Paulino, AC, Rutkowski, S, Fleischhack, G, Dhall, G, Klesse, LJ, Leary, S, Nazarian, J, Kool, M, Wesseling, P, Ryzhova, M, Zheludkova, O, Golanov, A, McLendon, RE, Packer, RJ, Dunham, C, Hukin, J, Fouladi, M, Faria, CC, Pimentel, J, Walter, AW, Jabado, N, Cho, Y-J, Perreault, S, Croul, SE, Zapotocky, M, Hawkins, C, Tabori, U, Taylor, MD, Pfister, SM, Klimo, P, Boop, FA, Ellison, DW, Merchant, TE, Onar-Thomas, A, Korshunov, A, Jones, DTW, Gajjar, A, Ramaswamy, V, Northcott, PA, Kumar, R, Smith, KS, Deng, M, Terhune, C, Robinson, GW, Orr, BA, Liu, APY, Lin, T, Billups, CA, Chintagumpala, M, Bowers, DC, Hassall, TE, Hansford, JR, Khuong-Quang, DA, Crawford, JR, Bendel, AE, Gururangan, S, Schroeder, K, Bouffet, E, Bartels, U, Fisher, MJ, Cohn, R, Partap, S, Kellie, SJ, McCowage, G, Paulino, AC, Rutkowski, S, Fleischhack, G, Dhall, G, Klesse, LJ, Leary, S, Nazarian, J, Kool, M, Wesseling, P, Ryzhova, M, Zheludkova, O, Golanov, A, McLendon, RE, Packer, RJ, Dunham, C, Hukin, J, Fouladi, M, Faria, CC, Pimentel, J, Walter, AW, Jabado, N, Cho, Y-J, Perreault, S, Croul, SE, Zapotocky, M, Hawkins, C, Tabori, U, Taylor, MD, Pfister, SM, Klimo, P, Boop, FA, Ellison, DW, Merchant, TE, Onar-Thomas, A, Korshunov, A, Jones, DTW, Gajjar, A, Ramaswamy, V, and Northcott, PA
- Abstract
PURPOSE: We sought to investigate clinical outcomes of relapsed medulloblastoma and to compare molecular features between patient-matched diagnostic and relapsed tumors. METHODS: Children and infants enrolled on either SJMB03 (NCT00085202) or SJYC07 (NCT00602667) trials who experienced medulloblastoma relapse were analyzed for clinical outcomes, including anatomic and temporal patterns of relapse and postrelapse survival. A largely independent, paired molecular cohort was analyzed by DNA methylation array and next-generation sequencing. RESULTS: A total of 72 of 329 (22%) SJMB03 and 52 of 79 (66%) SJYC07 patients experienced relapse with significant representation of Group 3 and wingless tumors. Although most patients exhibited some distal disease (79%), 38% of patients with sonic hedgehog tumors experienced isolated local relapse. Time to relapse and postrelapse survival varied by molecular subgroup with longer latencies for patients with Group 4 tumors. Postrelapse radiation therapy among previously nonirradiated SJYC07 patients was associated with long-term survival. Reirradiation was only temporizing for SJMB03 patients. Among 127 patients with patient-matched tumor pairs, 9 (7%) experienced subsequent nonmedulloblastoma CNS malignancies. Subgroup (96%) and subtype (80%) stabilities were largely maintained among the remainder. Rare subgroup divergence was observed from Group 4 to Group 3 tumors, which is coincident with genetic alterations involving MYC, MYCN, and FBXW7. Subgroup-specific patterns of alteration were identified for driver genes and chromosome arms. CONCLUSION: Clinical behavior of relapsed medulloblastoma must be contextualized in terms of up-front therapies and molecular classifications. Group 4 tumors exhibit slower biological progression. Utility of radiation at relapse is dependent on patient age and prior treatments. Degree and patterns of molecular conservation at relapse vary by subgroup. Relapse tissue enables verification of molecular ta
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- 2021
4. The integrated genomic and epigenomic landscape of brainstem glioma
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Chen, LH, Pan, C, Diplas, BH, Xu, C, Hansen, LJ, Wu, Y, Chen, X, Geng, Y, Sun, T, Sun, Y, Zhang, P, Wu, Z, Zhang, J, Li, D, Zhang, Y, Wu, W, Wang, Y, Li, G, Yang, J, Wang, X, Wang, S, Waitkus, MS, He, Y, McLendon, RE, Ashley, D, Yan, H, Zhang, L, Chen, LH, Pan, C, Diplas, BH, Xu, C, Hansen, LJ, Wu, Y, Chen, X, Geng, Y, Sun, T, Sun, Y, Zhang, P, Wu, Z, Zhang, J, Li, D, Zhang, Y, Wu, W, Wang, Y, Li, G, Yang, J, Wang, X, Wang, S, Waitkus, MS, He, Y, McLendon, RE, Ashley, D, Yan, H, and Zhang, L
- Abstract
Brainstem gliomas are a heterogeneous group of tumors that encompass both benign tumors cured with surgical resection and highly lethal cancers with no efficacious therapies. We perform a comprehensive study incorporating epigenetic and genomic analyses on a large cohort of brainstem gliomas, including Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Gliomas. Here we report, from DNA methylation data, distinct clusters termed H3-Pons, H3-Medulla, IDH, and PA-like, each associated with unique genomic and clinical profiles. The majority of tumors within H3-Pons and-H3-Medulla harbors H3F3A mutations but shows distinct methylation patterns that correlate with anatomical localization within the pons or medulla, respectively. Clinical data show significantly different overall survival between these clusters, and pathway analysis demonstrates different oncogenic mechanisms in these samples. Our findings indicate that the integration of genetic and epigenetic data can facilitate better understanding of brainstem gliomagenesis and classification, and guide future studies for the development of novel treatments for this disease.
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- 2020
5. Pattern of Relapse and Treatment Response in WNT-Activated Medulloblastoma
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Nobre, L, Zapotocky, M, Khan, S, Fukuoka, K, Fonseca, A, McKeown, T, Sumerauer, D, Vicha, A, Grajkowska, WA, Trubicka, J, Li, KKW, Ng, H-K, Massimi, L, Lee, JY, Kim, S-K, Zelcer, S, Vasiljevic, A, Faure-Conter, C, Hauser, P, Lach, B, Van Veelen-Vincent, M-L, French, PJ, Van Meir, EG, Weiss, WA, Gupta, N, Pollack, IF, Hamilton, RL, Rao, AAN, Giannini, C, Rubin, JB, Moore, AS, Chambless, LB, Vibhakar, R, Ra, YS, Massimino, M, McLendon, RE, Wheeler, H, Zollo, M, Ferruci, V, Kumabe, T, Faria, CC, Sterba, J, Jung, S, Lopez-Aguilar, E, Mora, J, Carlotti, CG, Olson, JM, Leary, S, Cain, J, Krskova, L, Zamecnik, J, Hawkins, CE, Tabori, U, Huang, A, Bartels, U, Northcott, PA, Taylor, MD, Yip, S, Hansford, JR, Bouffet, E, Ramaswamy, V, Nobre, L, Zapotocky, M, Khan, S, Fukuoka, K, Fonseca, A, McKeown, T, Sumerauer, D, Vicha, A, Grajkowska, WA, Trubicka, J, Li, KKW, Ng, H-K, Massimi, L, Lee, JY, Kim, S-K, Zelcer, S, Vasiljevic, A, Faure-Conter, C, Hauser, P, Lach, B, Van Veelen-Vincent, M-L, French, PJ, Van Meir, EG, Weiss, WA, Gupta, N, Pollack, IF, Hamilton, RL, Rao, AAN, Giannini, C, Rubin, JB, Moore, AS, Chambless, LB, Vibhakar, R, Ra, YS, Massimino, M, McLendon, RE, Wheeler, H, Zollo, M, Ferruci, V, Kumabe, T, Faria, CC, Sterba, J, Jung, S, Lopez-Aguilar, E, Mora, J, Carlotti, CG, Olson, JM, Leary, S, Cain, J, Krskova, L, Zamecnik, J, Hawkins, CE, Tabori, U, Huang, A, Bartels, U, Northcott, PA, Taylor, MD, Yip, S, Hansford, JR, Bouffet, E, and Ramaswamy, V
- Abstract
Over the past decade, wingless-activated (WNT) medulloblastoma has been identified as a candidate for therapy de-escalation based on excellent survival; however, a paucity of relapses has precluded additional analyses of markers of relapse. To address this gap in knowledge, an international cohort of 93 molecularly confirmed WNT MB was assembled, where 5-year progression-free survival is 0.84 (95%, 0.763-0.925) with 15 relapsed individuals identified. Maintenance chemotherapy is identified as a strong predictor of relapse, with individuals receiving high doses of cyclophosphamide or ifosphamide having only one very late molecularly confirmed relapse (p = 0.032). The anatomical location of recurrence is metastatic in 12 of 15 relapses, with 8 of 12 metastatic relapses in the lateral ventricles. Maintenance chemotherapy, specifically cumulative cyclophosphamide doses, is a significant predictor of relapse across WNT MB. Future efforts to de-escalate therapy need to carefully consider not only the radiation dose but also the chemotherapy regimen and the propensity for metastatic relapses.
- Published
- 2020
6. Deubiquitinase USP13 maintains glioblastoma stem cells by antagonizing FBXL14-mediated Myc ubiquitination
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Fang X, Zhou W, Wu Q, Huang Z, Shi Y, Yang K, Chen C, Xie Q, Mack SC, Wang X, Carcaboso AM, Sloan AE, Ouyang G, McLendon RE, Bian XW, Rich JN, and Bao S
- Subjects
endocrine system ,fungi - Abstract
Glioblastoma is the most lethal brain tumor and harbors glioma stem cells (GSCs) with potent tumorigenic capacity. The function of GSCs in tumor propagation is maintained by several core transcriptional regulators including c-Myc. c-Myc protein is tightly regulated by posttranslational modification. However, the posttranslational regulatory mechanisms for c-Myc in GSCs have not been defined. In this study, we demonstrate that the deubiquitinase USP13 stabilizes c-Myc by antagonizing FBXL14-mediated ubiquitination to maintain GSC self-renewal and tumorigenic potential. USP13 was preferentially expressed in GSCs, and its depletion potently inhibited GSC proliferation and tumor growth by promoting c-Myc ubiquitination and degradation. In contrast, overexpression of the ubiquitin E3 ligase FBXL14 induced c-Myc degradation, promoted GSC differentiation, and inhibited tumor growth. Ectopic expression of the ubiquitin-insensitive mutant T58A-c-Myc rescued the effects caused by FBXL14 overexpression or USP13 disruption. These data suggest that USP13 and FBXL14 play opposing roles in the regulation of GSCs through reversible ubiquitination of c-Myc.
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- 2017
7. Prognostic value of medulloblastoma extent of resection after accounting for molecular subgroup: a retrospective integrated clinical and molecular analysis
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Thompson, EM, Hielscher, T, Bouffet, E, Remke, M, Luu, B, Gururangan, S, McLendon, RE, Bigner, DD, Lipp, ES, Perreault, S, Cho, YJ, Grant, G, Kim, SK, Lee, JY, Rao, AAN, Giannini, C, Li, KKW, Ng, HK, Yao, Y, Kumabe, T, Tominaga, T, Grajkowska, WA, Perek-Polnik, M, Low, DCY, Seow, WT, Chang, KTE, Mora, J, Pollack, IF, Hamilton, RL, Leary, S, Moore, AS, Ingram, WJ, Hallahan, AR, Jouvet, A, Fèvre-Montange, M, Vasiljevic, A, Faure-Conter, C, Shofuda, T, Kagawa, N, Hashimoto, N, Jabado, N, Weil, AG, Gayden, T, Wataya, T, Shalaby, T, Grotzer, M, Zitterbart, K, Sterba, J, Kren, L, Hortobágyi, T, Klekner, A, László, B, Pócza, T, Hauser, P, Schüller, U, Jung, S, Jang, WY, French, PJ, Kros, JM, van Veelen, MLC, Massimi, L, Leonard, JR, Rubin, JB, Vibhakar, R, Chambless, LB, Cooper, MK, Thompson, RC, Faria, CC, Carvalho, A, Nunes, S, Pimentel, J, Fan, X, Muraszko, KM, López-Aguilar, E, Lyden, D, Garzia, L, Shih, DJH, Kijima, N, Schneider, C, Adamski, J, Northcott, PA, Kool, M, Jones, DTW, Chan, JA, Nikolic, A, Garre, ML, Van Meir, EG, Osuka, S, Olson, JJ, Jahangiri, A, and Castro, BA
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Adult ,Male ,Canada ,Brain Neoplasms ,Infant ,Prognosis ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Disease-Free Survival ,Child, Preschool ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Medulloblastoma ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
© 2016 Elsevier Ltd Background Patients with incomplete surgical resection of medulloblastoma are controversially regarded as having a marker of high-risk disease, which leads to patients undergoing aggressive surgical resections, so-called second-look surgeries, and intensified chemoradiotherapy. All previous studies assessing the clinical importance of extent of resection have not accounted for molecular subgroup. We analysed the prognostic value of extent of resection in a subgroup-specific manner. Methods We retrospectively identified patients who had a histological diagnosis of medulloblastoma and complete data about extent of resection and survival from centres participating in the Medulloblastoma Advanced Genomics International Consortium. We collected from resections done between April, 1997, and February, 2013, at 35 international institutions. We established medulloblastoma subgroup affiliation by gene expression profiling on frozen or formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues. We classified extent of resection on the basis of postoperative imaging as gross total resection (no residual tumour), near-total resection (30 Gy vs no craniospinal irradiation). The primary analysis outcome was the effect of extent of resection by molecular subgroup and the effects of other clinical variables on overall and progression-free survival. Findings We included 787 patients with medulloblastoma (86 with WNT tumours, 242 with SHH tumours, 163 with group 3 tumours, and 296 with group 4 tumours) in our multivariable Cox models of progression-free and overall survival. We found that the prognostic benefit of increased extent of resection for patients with medulloblastoma is attenuated after molecular subgroup affiliation is taken into account. We identified a progression-free survival benefit for gross total resection over sub-total resection (hazard ratio [HR] 1·45, 95% CI 1·07–1·96, p=0·16) but no overall survival benefit (HR 1·23, 0·87–1·72, p=0·24). We saw no progression-free survival or overall survival benefit for gross total resection compared with near-total resection (HR 1·05, 0·71–1·53, p=0·8158 for progression-free survival and HR 1·14, 0·75–1·72, p=0·55 for overall survival). No significant survival benefit existed for greater extent of resection for patients with WNT, SHH, or group 3 tumours (HR 1·03, 0·67–1·58, p=0·89 for sub-total resection vs gross total resection). For patients with group 4 tumours, gross total resection conferred a benefit to progression-free survival compared with sub-total resection (HR 1·97, 1·22–3·17, p=0·0056), especially for those with metastatic disease (HR 2·22, 1·00–4·93, p=0·050). However, gross total resection had no effect on overall survival compared with sub-total resection in patients with group 4 tumours (HR 1·67, 0·93–2·99, p=0·084). Interpretation The prognostic benefit of increased extent of resection for patients with medulloblastoma is attenuated after molecular subgroup affiliation is taken into account. Although maximum safe surgical resection should remain the standard of care, surgical removal of small residual portions of medulloblastoma is not recommended when the likelihood of neurological morbidity is high because there is no definitive benefit to gross total resection compared with near-total resection. Funding Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute, Terry Fox Research Institute, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, National Institutes of Health, Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation, and the Garron Family Chair in Childhood Cancer Research.
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- 2016
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8. Chapter 12. Oligodendroglioma
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McLendon, RE, Kros, J.M., Bruner, J, Gray, L, McLendon, R.E., Rosenblum, M.K., Bigner, D.D., and Pathology
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- 2006
9. Chapter 13. Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma
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McLendon, RE, Kros, J.M., Gray, L, Bruner, J, McLendon, R.E., Rosenblum, M.K., Bigner, D.D., and Pathology
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- 2006
10. TERT promoter mutations are highly recurrent in SHH subgroup medulloblastoma
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Remke, M, Ramaswamy, V, Peacock, J, Shih, DJH, Koelsche, C, Northcott, PA, Hill, N, Cavalli, FMG, Kool, Mirjam, Wang, X, Mack, SC, Barszczyk, M, Morrissy, AS, Wu, XC, Agnihotri, S, Luu, B, Jones, DTW, Garzia, L, Dubuc, AM, Zhukova, N, Vanner, R, Kros, J.M., French, Pim, van Meir, EG, Vibhakar, R, Zitterbart, K, Chan, JA, Bognar, L, Klekner, A, Lach, B, Jung, S, Saad, AG, Albrecht, S, Liau, LM, Zollo, M, Cooper, MK, Thompson, RC, Delattre, OO, Bourdeaut, F, Doz, FF, Garami, M, Hauser, P, Carlotti, CG, Van Meter, TE, Massimi, L, Fults, D, Pomeroy, SL, Kumabe, T, Ra, YS, Leonard, JR, Elbabaa, SK, Mora, J, Rubin, JB, Cho, YJ, McLendon, RE, Bigner, DD, Eberhart, CG, Fouladi, M, Wechsler-Reya, RJ, Faria, CC, Croul, SE, Huang, A, Bouffet, E, Hawkins, CE, Dirks, PB, Weiss, WA, Schuller, U, Pollack, IF, Rutkowski, S, Meyronet, D, Jouvet, A, Fevre-Montange, M, Jabado, N, Perek-Polnik, M, Grajkowska, WA, Kim, SK, Rutka, JT, Malkin, D, Tabori, U, Pfister, SM, Korshunov, A, von Deimling, A, Taylor, MD, Remke, M, Ramaswamy, V, Peacock, J, Shih, DJH, Koelsche, C, Northcott, PA, Hill, N, Cavalli, FMG, Kool, Mirjam, Wang, X, Mack, SC, Barszczyk, M, Morrissy, AS, Wu, XC, Agnihotri, S, Luu, B, Jones, DTW, Garzia, L, Dubuc, AM, Zhukova, N, Vanner, R, Kros, J.M., French, Pim, van Meir, EG, Vibhakar, R, Zitterbart, K, Chan, JA, Bognar, L, Klekner, A, Lach, B, Jung, S, Saad, AG, Albrecht, S, Liau, LM, Zollo, M, Cooper, MK, Thompson, RC, Delattre, OO, Bourdeaut, F, Doz, FF, Garami, M, Hauser, P, Carlotti, CG, Van Meter, TE, Massimi, L, Fults, D, Pomeroy, SL, Kumabe, T, Ra, YS, Leonard, JR, Elbabaa, SK, Mora, J, Rubin, JB, Cho, YJ, McLendon, RE, Bigner, DD, Eberhart, CG, Fouladi, M, Wechsler-Reya, RJ, Faria, CC, Croul, SE, Huang, A, Bouffet, E, Hawkins, CE, Dirks, PB, Weiss, WA, Schuller, U, Pollack, IF, Rutkowski, S, Meyronet, D, Jouvet, A, Fevre-Montange, M, Jabado, N, Perek-Polnik, M, Grajkowska, WA, Kim, SK, Rutka, JT, Malkin, D, Tabori, U, Pfister, SM, Korshunov, A, von Deimling, A, and Taylor, MD
- Abstract
Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter mutations were recently shown to drive telomerase activity in various cancer types, including medulloblastoma. However, the clinical and biological implications of TERT mutations in medulloblastoma have not been described. Hence, we sought to describe these mutations and their impact in a subgroup-specific manner. We analyzed the TERT promoter by direct sequencing and genotyping in 466 medulloblastomas. The mutational distributions were determined according to subgroup affiliation, demographics, and clinical, prognostic, and molecular features. Integrated genomics approaches were used to identify specific somatic copy number alterations in TERT promoter-mutated and wild-type tumors. Overall, TERT promoter mutations were identified in 21 % of medulloblastomas. Strikingly, the highest frequencies of TERT mutations were observed in SHH (83 %; 55/66) and WNT (31 %; 4/13) medulloblastomas derived from adult patients. Group 3 and Group 4 harbored this alteration in < 5 % of cases and showed no association with increased patient age. The prognostic implications of these mutations were highly subgroup-specific. TERT mutations identified a subset with good and poor prognosis in SHH and Group 4 tumors, respectively. Monosomy 6 was mostly restricted to WNT tumors without TERT mutations. Hallmark SHH focal copy number aberrations and chromosome 10q deletion were mutually exclusive with TERT mutations within SHH tumors. TERT promoter mutations are the most common recurrent somatic point mutation in medulloblastoma, and are very highly enriched in adult SHH and WNT tumors. TERT mutations define a subset of SHH medulloblastoma with distinct demographics, cytogenetics, and outcomes.
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- 2013
11. Phase II study of carboplatin (CBDCA) in progressive low-grade gliomas.
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Moghrabi, A, Friedman, HS, Ashley, David, Bottom, KS, Kerby, T, Stewart, E, Bruggers, C, Provenzale, JM, Champagne, M, Hershon, L, Watral, M, Ryan, J, Rasheed, K, Lovell, S, Korones, D, Fuchs, H, George, T, McLendon, RE, Friedman, AH, Buckley, E, Longee, DC, Moghrabi, A, Friedman, HS, Ashley, David, Bottom, KS, Kerby, T, Stewart, E, Bruggers, C, Provenzale, JM, Champagne, M, Hershon, L, Watral, M, Ryan, J, Rasheed, K, Lovell, S, Korones, D, Fuchs, H, George, T, McLendon, RE, Friedman, AH, Buckley, E, and Longee, DC
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- 1998
12. 2013 The impact of hypoxia and oxygenation modification on the radiation response of an intracranial rat glioma
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Bean, JM, primary, Archer, GE, additional, Munley, MT, additional, Ong, E, additional, Snyder, SA, additional, Haroon, ZA, additional, McLendon, RE, additional, Marks, LB, additional, Stratford, MRL, additional, Chaplin, DJ, additional, Brizel, DM, additional, Bigner, DD, additional, and Dewhirst, MW, additional
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- 1997
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13. Phase 1 trial of temozolomide plus irinotecan plus O6-benzylguanine in adults with recurrent malignant glioma.
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Quinn JA, Jiang SX, Reardon DA, Desjardins A, Vredenburgh JJ, Gururangan S, Sampson JH, McLendon RE, Herndon JE 2nd, Friedman HS, Quinn, Jennifer A, Jiang, Sara Xiaoyin, Reardon, David A, Desjardins, Annick, Vredenburgh, James J, Gururangan, Sridharan, Sampson, John H, McLendon, Roger E, Herndon, James E 2nd, and Friedman, Henry S
- Abstract
Background: The current study was a phase 1 clinical trial conducted with patients who had recurrent or progressive malignant glioma (MG). The trial was designed to determine the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) and toxicity of irinotecan (CPT-11) when administered with temozolomide (TMZ) and O(6)-benzylguanine (O(6)-BG).Methods: All 3 drugs, CPT-11, TMZ, and O(6)-BG, were administered on Day 1 of a 21-day treatment. First, patients were treated with a 1-hour bolus infusion of O(6)-BG at a dose of 120 mg/m(2) followed immediately by a 48-hour continuous infusion of O(6)-BG at a dose of 30 mg/m(2)/d. Second, within 60 minutes of the end of the 1-hour bolus infusion of O(6)-BG, TMZ was administered orally at a dose of 355 mg/m(2). Third, 1 hour after administration of TMZ, CPT-11 was infused over 90 minutes. Patients were accrued to 1 of 2 strata based on CYP3A1- and CYP3A4-inducing antiepileptic drug (EIAED) use; dose escalation was conducted independently within these strata.Results: Fifty-five patients were enrolled. In both strata, the dose-limiting toxicities were hematologic and included grade 4 neutropenia, febrile neutropenia, leukopenia, and/or thrombocytopenia. For Stratum 1 (EIAEDs), when TMZ was administered at a dose of 355 mg/m(2), the MTD of CPT-11 was determined to be 120 mg/m(2). In contrast, for Stratum 2 (no EIAEDs), when TMZ was administered at a dose of 200 mg/m(2), the MTD of CPT-11 was determined to be 80 mg/m(2).Conclusions: The authors believe that the results of the current study provide the foundation for a phase 2 trial of O(6)-BG in combination with CPT-11 and TMZ in patients with MG. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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14. Phase II trial of temozolomide plus o6-benzylguanine in adults with recurrent, temozolomide-resistant malignant glioma.
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Quinn JA, Jiang SX, Reardon DA, Desjardins A, Vredenburgh JJ, Rich JN, Gururangan S, Friedman AH, Bigner DD, Sampson JH, McLendon RE, Herndon JE 2nd, Walker A, Friedman HS, Quinn, Jennifer A, Jiang, Sara Xiaoyin, Reardon, David A, Desjardins, Annick, Vredenburgh, James J, and Rich, Jeremy N
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- 2009
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15. Tumor angiogenic and hypoxic profiles predict radiographic response and survival in malignant astrocytoma patients treated with bevacizumab and irinotecan.
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Sathornsumetee S, Cao Y, Marcello JE, Herndon JE 2nd, McLendon RE, Desjardins A, Friedman HS, Dewhirst MW, Vredenburgh JJ, Rich JN, Sathornsumetee, Sith, Cao, Yiting, Marcello, Jennifer E, Herndon, James E 2nd, McLendon, Roger E, Desjardins, Annick, Friedman, Henry S, Dewhirst, Mark W, Vredenburgh, James J, and Rich, Jeremy N
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- 2008
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16. Second messenger systems in human gliomas.
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McLendon RE, Turner K, Perkinson K, and Rich J
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- 2007
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17. Localized peribronchial thickening: a CT sign of occult bronchogenic carcinoma
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Foster, WL, primary, Roberts, L, additional, McLendon, RE, additional, and Hill, RC, additional
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- 1985
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18. Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy with occult Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia.
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Chiarchiaro J, McLendon RE, Buckley PJ, and Laskowitz DT
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- 2010
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19. Surgical neuropathology update: a review of changes introduced by the WHO classification of tumours of the central nervous system, 4th edition.
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Brat DJ, Parisi JE, Kleinschmidt-DeMasters BK, Yachnis AT, Montine TJ, Boyer PJ, Powell SZ, Prayson RA, McLendon RE, and College of American Pathologists. Neuropathology Committee
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- 2008
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20. Therapeutic impact of cytoreductive surgery and irradiation of posterior fossa ependymoma in the molecular era: A retrospective multicohort analysis
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Uri Tabori, Marta M. Alonso, Frank S. Lieberman, James T. Rutka, Xing Fan, Kevin Petrecca, Michael A. Grotzer, Lyndsey Emery, Jennifer A. Chan, Luca Massimi, Elizabeth Vera-Bolanos, Antonio Omuro, Richard Everson, Stewart Goldman, Sarah Leary, Alvaro Lassaletta, Sofia Nunes, Ralph P. Ermoian, Betty Luu, Cynthia Hawkins, Amulya A. Nageswara Rao, Jeffrey R. Leonard, Maura Massimino, Teresa Tuñón, Massimo Zollo, James M. Olson, Almos Klekner, Andrey Korshunov, Ute Bartels, Tong Lin, Roger J. Packer, Matthias A. Karajannis, David W. Ellison, Christopher Dunham, David D. Eisenstat, Jaume Mora, Martin Mynarek, Erwin G. Van Meir, Roger E. McLendon, Karel Zitterbart, Corrine Gardner, Giuseppe Cinalli, Amar Gajjar, Kenneth Aldape, Karin M. Muraszko, Vijay Ramaswamy, Thomas Hielscher, Ronald L. Hamilton, Lola B. Chambless, Michael D. Prados, David T.W. Jones, Harshad Ladha, Horacio Soto, Wiesława Grajkowska, Jason E. Cain, Felice Giangaspero, Marcel Kool, Eric S. Lipp, William H. Yong, Andrew J. Grossbach, Tibor Hortobágyi, Tarek Shalaby, Helen Wheeler, Peter Hauser, Marie Lise C. van Veelen, Kristian W. Pajtler, Dorcas Fulton, Mariarita Santi, László Bognár, Jaroslav Sterba, Jing Wu, Ji Yeoun Lee, Carlos Gilberto Carlotti, Katja von Hoff, Stefan Rutkowski, Michael D. Taylor, Daniela Pretti da Cunha Tirapelli, Phillipe Metellus, Stephen C. Mack, Thomas E. Merchant, Samer K. Elbabaa, Marc Remke, Girish Dhall, Riccardo Soffietti, Eric Bouffet, Miguel A. Guzman, Khalida Wani, Charles G. Eberhart, Terri S. Armstrong, Tom Mikkelsen, Francesca R. Buttarelli, Nada Jabado, Paul G. Fisher, Juliette Hukin, Maryam Fouladi, Sama Ahsan, Sueli Mieko Oba-Shinjo, Linda M. Liau, Satoru Osuka, Sridharan Gururangan, Peter B. Dirks, Eugene Hwang, Howard Colman, H. Ian Robins, Caterina Giannini, Suely Kazue Nagahashi Marie, Frank van Landeghem, Mark R. Gilbert, Ulrich Schüller, Florence M.G. Cavalli, David Zagzag, Ian F. Pollack, Claudia C. Faria, Stefan M. Pfister, Shin Jung, Ramaswamy, V, Hielscher, T, Mack, Sc, Lassaletta, A, Lin, T, Pajtler, Kw, Jones, Dt, Luu, B, Cavalli, Fm, Aldape, K, Remke, M, Mynarek, M, Rutkowski, S, Gururangan, S, Mclendon, Re, Lipp, E, Dunham, C, Hukin, J, Eisenstat, Dd, Fulton, D, van Landeghem, Fk, Santi, M, van Veelen, Ml, Van Meir, Eg, Osuka, S, Fan, X, Muraszko, Km, Tirapelli, Dp, Oba Shinjo, Sm, Marie, Sk, Carlotti, Cg, Lee, Jy, Rao, Aa, Giannini, C, Faria, Cc, Nunes, S, Mora, J, Hamilton, Rl, Hauser, P, Jabado, N, Petrecca, K, Jung, S, Massimi, L, Zollo, Massimo, Cinalli, G, Bognár, L, Klekner, A, Hortobágyi, T, Leary, S, Ermoian, Rp, Olson, Jm, Leonard, Jr, Gardner, C, Grajkowska, Wa, Chambless, Lb, Cain, J, Eberhart, Cg, Ahsan, S, Massimino, M, Giangaspero, F, Buttarelli, Fr, Packer, Rj, Emery, L, Yong, Wh, Soto, H, Liau, Lm, Everson, R, Grossbach, A, Shalaby, T, Grotzer, M, Karajannis, Ma, Zagzag, D, Wheeler, H, von Hoff, K, Alonso, Mm, Tuñon, T, Schüller, U, Zitterbart, K, Sterba, J, Chan, Ja, Guzman, M, Elbabaa, Sk, Colman, H, Dhall, G, Fisher, Pg, Fouladi, M, Gajjar, A, Goldman, S, Hwang, E, Kool, M, Ladha, H, Vera Bolanos, E, Wani, K, Lieberman, F, Mikkelsen, T, Omuro, Am, Pollack, If, Prados, M, Robins, Hi, Soffietti, R, Wu, J, Metellus, P, Tabori, U, Bartels, U, Bouffet, E, Hawkins, Ce, Rutka, Jt, Dirks, P, Pfister, Sm, Merchant, Te, Gilbert, Mr, Armstrong, T, Korshunov, A, Ellison, Dw, Taylor, M. d., Ramaswamy V., Hielscher T., Mack S.C., Lassaletta A., Lin T., Pajtler K.W., Jones D.T.W., Luu B., Cavalli F.M.G., Aldape K., Remke M., Mynarek M., Rutkowski S., Gururangan S., McLendon R.E., Lipp E.S., Dunham C., Hukin J., Eisenstat D.D., Fulton D., Van Landeghem F.K.H., Santi M., Van Veelen M.-L.C., Van Meir E.G., Osuka S., Fan X., Muraszko K.M., Tirapelli D.P.C., Oba-Shinjo S.M., Marie S.K.N., Carlotti C.G., Lee J.Y., Rao A.A.N., Giannini C., Faria C.C., Nunes S., Mora J., Hamilton R.L., Hauser P., Jabado N., Petrecca K., Jung S., Massimi L., Zollo M., Cinalli G., Bognar L., Klekner A., Hortobagyi T., Leary S., Ermoian R.P., Olson J.M., Leonard J.R., Gardner C., Grajkowska W.A., Chambless L.B., Cain J., Eberhart C.G., Ahsan S., Massimino M., Giangaspero F., Buttarelli F.R., Packer R.J., Emery L., Yong W.H., Soto H., Liau L.M., Everson R., Grossbach A., Shalaby T., Grotzer M., Karajannis M.A., Zagzag D., Wheeler H., Von Hoff K., Alonso M.M., Tunon T., Schuller U., Zitterbart K., Sterba J., Chan J.A., Guzman M., Elbabaa S.K., Colman H., Dhall G., Fisher P.G., Fouladi M., Gajjar A., Goldman S., Hwang E., Kool M., Ladha H., Vera-Bolanos E., Wani K., Lieberman F., Mikkelsen T., Omuro A.M., Pollack I.F., Prados M., Robins H.I., Soffietti R., Wu J., Metellus P., Tabori U., Bartels U., Bouffet E., Hawkins C.E., Rutka J.T., Dirks P., Pfister S.M., Merchant T.E., Gilbert M.R., Armstrong T.S., Korshunov A., Ellison D.W., Taylor M.D., and Neurosurgery
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Male ,Ependymoma ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,cancer research ,oncology ,posterior fossa ependymoma ,cytoreductive surgery ,radiation therapy ,Infratentorial Neoplasms ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Retrospective Studie ,Medicine ,Pediatric ependymoma ,Child ,10. No inequality ,Infratentorial Neoplasm ,biology ,Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures ,Combined Modality Therapy ,3. Good health ,Oncology ,Child, Preschool ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Radiology ,Human ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Fossa ,Ependymoma, biomarkers ,03 medical and health sciences ,Original Reports ,Humans ,Retrospective Studies ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Radiation therapy ,Cohort Studie ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose Posterior fossa ependymoma comprises two distinct molecular variants termed EPN_PFA and EPN_PFB that have a distinct biology and natural history. The therapeutic value of cytoreductive surgery and radiation therapy for posterior fossa ependymoma after accounting for molecular subgroup is not known. Methods Four independent nonoverlapping retrospective cohorts of posterior fossa ependymomas (n = 820) were profiled using genome-wide methylation arrays. Risk stratification models were designed based on known clinical and newly described molecular biomarkers identified by multivariable Cox proportional hazards analyses. Results Molecular subgroup is a powerful independent predictor of outcome even when accounting for age or treatment regimen. Incompletely resected EPN_PFA ependymomas have a dismal prognosis, with a 5-year progression-free survival ranging from 26.1% to 56.8% across all four cohorts. Although first-line (adjuvant) radiation is clearly beneficial for completely resected EPN_PFA, a substantial proportion of patients with EPN_PFB can be cured with surgery alone, and patients with relapsed EPN_PFB can often be treated successfully with delayed external-beam irradiation. Conclusion The most impactful biomarker for posterior fossa ependymoma is molecular subgroup affiliation, independent of other demographic or treatment variables. However, both EPN_PFA and EPN_PFB still benefit from increased extent of resection, with the survival rates being particularly poor for subtotally resected EPN_PFA, even with adjuvant radiation therapy. Patients with EPN_PFB who undergo gross total resection are at lower risk for relapse and should be considered for inclusion in a randomized clinical trial of observation alone with radiation reserved for those who experience recurrence.
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- 2016
21. Subgroup-specific structural variation across 1,000 medulloblastoma genomes
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Jenny Q. Qian, Darell D. Bigner, Miklós Garami, Shaun D. Jackman, Wiesława Grajkowska, Nalin Gupta, Johan M. Kros, Poul H. Sorensen, Anna Kenney, Stéphanie Reynaud, Byung Kyu Cho, Ian F. Pollack, Marcel Kool, Steven C. Clifford, Kyu-Chang Wang, Inanc Birol, Tzvi Aviv, Hendrick Witt, Gemma Hoad, Martine F. Roussel, Christine Haberler, Pim J. French, Betty Luu, Cynthia Hawkins, Claudia C. Faria, Richard A. Moore, Karin M. Muraszko, Yuan Yao, Nanne K. Kloosterhof, Rameen Beroukhim, Leos Kren, Erna M.C. Michiels, Jan O. Korbel, Paul A. Northcott, Stefan M. Pfister, Marc Remke, Nina Thiessen, Jennifer A. Chan, Adam M. Fontebasso, Maryam Fouladi, Shin Jung, Richard G. Ellenbogen, Richard Corbett, László Bognár, Yoon Jae Cho, Massimo Zollo, Robert J. Wechsler-Reya, Steven E. Schumacher, Xing Fan, Michael J. Levy, Wolfram Scheurlen, Young Shin Ra, Adrian M. Stütz, William A. Weiss, Simon Bailey, Rajeev Vibhakar, Giuseppe Cinalli, Toshihiro Kumabe, Marco A. Marra, Christian R. Marshall, Eric Bouffet, Luca Massimi, Scott L. Pomeroy, Sarah S. Pernet-Fattet, Andrew J. Mungall, James T. Rutka, G. Yancey Gillespie, Charles G. Eberhart, Peter Hauser, Andy Chu, Jüri Reimand, Xiaochong Wu, Adi Rolider, Xin Wang, Stephen W. Scherer, Reid C. Thompson, Ka Ming Nip, Anne Jouvet, Timothy E. Van Meter, Robert A. Holt, Anthony Raymond, Livia Garzia, Teiji Tominaga, Erwin G. Van Meir, John Peacock, Michael D. Taylor, Achille Iolascon, Roger E. McLendon, Andrey Korshunov, Stephen C. Mack, Nada Jabado, Readman Chiu, Africa Fernandez-L, Eric Chuah, Richard Varhol, Hideo Nakamura, Samer K. Elbabaa, Uri Tabori, Peter B. Dirks, Gary D. Bader, Linda M. Liau, François Doz, Allan Lo, Janet C. Lindsey, Adrian M. Dubuc, Michelle Fèvre-Montange, David T.W. Jones, Carlos Gilberto Carlotti, Ali G. Saad, Steffen Albrecht, Michael K. Cooper, Karen Mungall, Daisuke Kawauchi, A. Sorana Morrissy, Boleslaw Lach, Karel Zitterbart, Joshua B. Rubin, Matthew Meyerson, Florence M.G. Cavalli, Yisu Li, Shenandoah Robinson, Marta Perek-Polnik, Olivier Delattre, David Malkin, Almos Klekner, James M. Olson, Steven J.M. Jones, Thomas Zichner, David W. Ellison, Seung-Ki Kim, Vijay Ramaswamy, Anath C. Lionel, David Shih, Jeffrey R. Leonard, Concezio Di Rocco, Pulmonary Medicine, Pediatrics, Neurology, Pathology, Northcott, Pa, Shih, Dj, Peacock, J, Garzia, L, Morrissy, A, Zichner, T, Stütz, Am, Korshunov, A, Reimand, J, Schumacher, Se, Beroukhim, R, Ellison, Dw, Marshall, Cr, Lionel, Ac, Mack, S, Dubuc, A, Yao, Y, Ramaswamy, V, Luu, B, Rolider, A, Cavalli, Fm, Wang, X, Remke, M, Wu, X, Chiu, Ry, Chu, A, Chuah, E, Corbett, Rd, Hoad, Gr, Jackman, Sd, Li, Y, Lo, A, Mungall, Kl, Nip, Km, Qian, Jq, Raymond, Ag, Thiessen, Nt, Varhol, Rj, Birol, I, Moore, Ra, Mungall, Aj, Holt, R, Kawauchi, D, Roussel, Mf, Kool, M, Jones, Dt, Witt, H, Fernandez L., A, Kenney, Am, Wechsler Reya, Rj, Dirks, P, Aviv, T, Grajkowska, Wa, Perek Polnik, M, Haberler, Cc, Delattre, O, Reynaud, S, Doz, Ff, Pernet Fattet, S, Cho, Bk, Kim, Sk, Wang, Kc, Scheurlen, W, Eberhart, Cg, Fèvre Montange, M, Jouvet, A, Pollack, If, Fan, X, Muraszko, Km, Gillespie, Gy, Di Rocco, C, Massimi, L, Michiels, Em, Kloosterhof, Nk, French, Pj, Kros, Jm, Olson, Jm, Ellenbogen, Rg, Zitterbart, K, Kren, L, Thompson, Rc, Cooper, Mk, Lach, B, Mclendon, Re, Bigner, Dd, Fontebasso, A, Albrecht, S, Jabado, N, Lindsey, Jc, Bailey, S, Gupta, N, Weiss, Wa, Bognár, L, Klekner, A, Van Meter, Te, Kumabe, T, Tominaga, T, Elbabaa, Sk, Leonard, Jr, Rubin, Jb, Liau, Lm, Van Meir, Eg, Fouladi, M, Nakamura, H, Cinalli, G, Garami, M, Hauser, P, Saad, Ag, Iolascon, Achille, Jung, S, Carlotti, Cg, Vibhakar, R, Ra, Y, Robinson, S, Zollo, Massimo, Faria, Cc, Chan, Ja, Levy, Ml, Sorensen, Ph, Meyerson, M, Pomeroy, Sl, Cho, Yj, Bader, Gd, Tabori, U, Hawkins, Ce, Bouffet, E, Scherer, Sw, Rutka, Jt, Malkin, D, Clifford, Sc, Jones, Sj, Korbel, Jo, Pfister, Sm, Marra, Ma, and Taylor, M. D.
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DNA Copy Number Variations ,Oncogene Proteins, Fusion ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Genes, myc ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,medulloblastoma ,Article ,Translocation, Genetic ,Targeted therapy ,Structural variation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Gene Duplication ,Gene duplication ,medicine ,Humans ,Hedgehog Proteins ,Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Child ,030304 developmental biology ,Medulloblastoma ,0303 health sciences ,Multidisciplinary ,Chromothripsis ,PROTEÍNAS DE TRANSPORTE (GENÉTICA) ,Genome, Human ,NF-kappa B ,Cancer ,Proteins ,Genomics ,medicine.disease ,Human genetics ,3. Good health ,PVT1 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Genomic Structural Variation ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,Carrier Proteins ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Medulloblastoma, the most common malignant paediatric brain tumour, is currently treated with nonspecific cytotoxic therapies including surgery, whole-brain radiation, and aggressive chemotherapy. As medulloblastoma exhibits marked intertumoural heterogeneity, with at least four distinct molecular variants, previous attempts to identify targets for therapy have been underpowered because of small samples sizes. Here we report somatic copy number aberrations (SCNAs) in 1,087 unique medulloblastomas. SCNAs are common in medulloblastoma, and are predominantly subgroup-enriched. The most common region of focal copy number gain is a tandem duplication of SNCAIP, a gene associated with Parkinson's disease, which is exquisitely restricted to Group 4 alpha. Recurrent translocations of PVT1, including PVT1-MYC and PVT1-NDRG1, that arise through chromothripsis are restricted to Group 3. Numerous targetable SCNAs, including recurrent events targeting TGF-beta signalling in Group 3, and NF-kappa B signalling in Group 4, suggest future avenues for rational, targeted therapy.
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- 2012
22. Spatial transcriptomics reveals segregation of tumor cell states in glioblastoma and marked immunosuppression within the perinecrotic niche.
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Liu M, Ji Z, Jain V, Smith VL, Hocke E, Patel AP, McLendon RE, Ashley DM, Gregory SG, and López GY
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- Humans, Glioblastoma genetics, Glioblastoma pathology, Glioblastoma metabolism, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Brain Neoplasms metabolism, Tumor Microenvironment genetics, Tumor Microenvironment immunology, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) remains an untreatable malignant tumor with poor patient outcomes, characterized by palisading necrosis and microvascular proliferation. While single-cell technology made it possible to characterize different lineage of glioma cells into neural progenitor-like (NPC-like), oligodendrocyte-progenitor-like (OPC-like), astrocyte-like (AC-like) and mesenchymal like (MES-like) states, it does not capture the spatial localization of these tumor cell states. Spatial transcriptomics empowers the study of the spatial organization of different cell types and tumor cell states and allows for the selection of regions of interest to investigate region-specific and cell-type-specific pathways. Here, we obtained paired 10x Chromium single-nuclei RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) and 10x Visium spatial transcriptomics data from three GBM patients to interrogate the GBM microenvironment. Integration of the snRNA-seq and spatial transcriptomics data reveals patterns of segregation of tumor cell states. For instance, OPC-like tumor and NPC-like tumor significantly segregate in two of the three samples. Our differentially expressed gene and pathway analyses uncovered significant pathways in functionally relevant niches. Specifically, perinecrotic regions were more immunosuppressive than the endogenous GBM microenvironment, and perivascular regions were more pro-inflammatory. Our gradient analysis suggests that OPC-like tumor cells tend to reside in areas closer to the tumor vasculature compared to tumor necrosis, which may reflect increased oxygen requirements for OPC-like cells. In summary, we characterized the localization of cell types and tumor cell states, the gene expression patterns, and pathways in different niches within the GBM microenvironment. Our results provide further evidence of the segregation of tumor cell states and highlight the immunosuppressive nature of the necrotic and perinecrotic niches in GBM., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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23. Repurposing Clemastine to Target Glioblastoma Cell Stemness.
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Sun MA, Yang R, Liu H, Wang W, Song X, Hu B, Reynolds N, Roso K, Chen LH, Greer PK, Keir ST, McLendon RE, Cheng SY, Bigner DD, Ashley DM, Pirozzi CJ, and He Y
- Abstract
Brain tumor-initiating cells (BTICs) and tumor cell plasticity promote glioblastoma (GBM) progression. Here, we demonstrate that clemastine, an over-the-counter drug for treating hay fever and allergy symptoms, effectively attenuated the stemness and suppressed the propagation of primary BTIC cultures bearing PDGFRA amplification. These effects on BTICs were accompanied by altered gene expression profiling indicative of their more differentiated states, resonating with the activity of clemastine in promoting the differentiation of normal oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) into mature oligodendrocytes. Functional assays for pharmacological targets of clemastine revealed that the Emopamil Binding Protein (EBP), an enzyme in the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway, is essential for BTIC propagation and a target that mediates the suppressive effects of clemastine. Finally, we showed that a neural stem cell-derived mouse glioma model displaying predominantly proneural features was similarly susceptible to clemastine treatment. Collectively, these results identify pathways essential for maintaining the stemness and progenitor features of GBMs, uncover BTIC dependency on EBP, and suggest that non-oncology, low-toxicity drugs with OPC differentiation-promoting activity can be repurposed to target GBM stemness and aid in their treatment.
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- 2023
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24. Cancer-associated SMARCAL1 loss-of-function mutations promote alternative lengthening of telomeres and tumorigenesis in telomerase-negative glioblastoma cells.
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Liu H, Xu C, Diplas BH, Brown A, Strickland LM, Yao H, Ling J, McLendon RE, Keir ST, Ashley DM, He Y, and Waitkus MS
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- Humans, Telomere Homeostasis, Mutation, Telomere genetics, Telomere metabolism, Carcinogenesis, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic genetics, DNA Helicases genetics, DNA Helicases metabolism, Telomerase genetics, Telomerase metabolism, Glioblastoma genetics
- Abstract
Background: Telomere maintenance mechanisms are required to enable the replicative immortality of malignant cells. While most cancers activate the enzyme telomerase, a subset of cancers uses telomerase-independent mechanisms termed alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT). ALT occurs via homology-directed-repair mechanisms and is frequently associated with ATRX mutations. We previously showed that a subset of adult glioblastoma (GBM) patients with ATRX-expressing ALT-positive tumors harbored loss-of-function mutations in the SMARCAL1 gene, which encodes an annealing helicase involved in replication fork remodeling and the resolution of replication stress. However, the causative relationship between SMARCAL1 deficiency, tumorigenesis, and de novo telomere synthesis is not understood., Methods: We used a patient-derived ALT-positive GBM cell line with native SMARCAL1 deficiency to investigate the role of SMARCAL1 in ALT-mediated de novo telomere synthesis, replication stress, and gliomagenesis in vivo., Results: Inducible rescue of SMARCAL1 expression suppresses ALT indicators and inhibits de novo telomere synthesis in GBM and osteosarcoma cells, suggesting that SMARCAL1 deficiency plays a functional role in ALT induction in cancers that natively lack SMARCAL1 function. SMARCAL1-deficient ALT-positive cells can be serially propagated in vivo in the absence of detectable telomerase activity, demonstrating that the SMARCAL1-deficient ALT phenotype maintains telomeres in a manner that promotes tumorigenesis., Conclusions: SMARCAL1 deficiency is permissive to ALT and promotes gliomagenesis. Inducible rescue of SMARCAL1 in ALT-positive cell lines permits the dynamic modulation of ALT activity, which will be valuable for future studies aimed at understanding the mechanisms of ALT and identifying novel anticancer therapeutics that target the ALT phenotype., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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25. Immunotoxin-αCD40 therapy activates innate and adaptive immunity and generates a durable antitumor response in glioblastoma models.
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Parker S, McDowall C, Sanchez-Perez L, Osorio C, Duncker PC, Briley A, Swartz AM, Herndon JE 2nd, Yu YA, McLendon RE, Tedder TF, Desjardins A, Ashley DM, Gunn MD, Enterline DS, Knorr DA, Pastan IH, Nair SK, Bigner DD, and Chandramohan V
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- Humans, Animals, Mice, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Adaptive Immunity, ErbB Receptors metabolism, Cell Line, Tumor, Glioblastoma pathology, Immunotoxins genetics, Glioma, Brain Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
D2C7-immunotoxin (IT), a dual-specific IT targeting wild-type epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and mutant EGFR variant III (EGFRvIII) proteins, demonstrates encouraging survival outcomes in a subset of patients with glioblastoma. We hypothesized that immunosuppression in glioblastoma limits D2C7-IT efficacy. To improve the response rate and reverse immunosuppression, we combined D2C7-IT tumor cell killing with αCD40 costimulation of antigen-presenting cells. In murine glioma models, a single intratumoral injection of D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment activated a proinflammatory phenotype in microglia and macrophages, promoted long-term tumor-specific CD8
+ T cell immunity, and generated cures. D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment increased intratumoral Slamf6+ CD8+ T cells with a progenitor phenotype and decreased terminally exhausted CD8+ T cells. D2C7-IT+αCD40 treatment stimulated intratumoral CD8+ T cell proliferation and generated cures in glioma-bearing mice despite FTY720-induced peripheral T cell sequestration. Tumor transcriptome profiling established CD40 up-regulation, pattern recognition receptor, cell senescence, and immune response pathway activation as the drivers of D2C7-IT+αCD40 antitumor responses. To determine potential translation, immunohistochemistry staining confirmed CD40 expression in human GBM tissue sections. These promising preclinical data allowed us to initiate a phase 1 study with D2C7-IT+αhCD40 in patients with malignant glioma (NCT04547777) to further evaluate this treatment in humans.- Published
- 2023
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26. Author Correction: Failure of human rhombic lip differentiation underlies medulloblastoma formation.
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Hendrikse LD, Haldipur P, Saulnier O, Millman J, Sjoboen AH, Erickson AW, Ong W, Gordon V, Coudière-Morrison L, Mercier AL, Shokouhian M, Suárez RA, Ly M, Borlase S, Scott DS, Vladoiu MC, Farooq H, Sirbu O, Nakashima T, Nambu S, Funakoshi Y, Bahcheli A, Diaz-Mejia JJ, Golser J, Bach K, Phuong-Bao T, Skowron P, Wang EY, Kumar SA, Balin P, Visvanathan A, Lee JJY, Ayoub R, Chen X, Chen X, Mungall KL, Luu B, Bérubé P, Wang YC, Pfister SM, Kim SK, Delattre O, Bourdeaut F, Doz F, Masliah-Planchon J, Grajkowska WA, Loukides J, Dirks P, Fèvre-Montange M, Jouvet A, French PJ, Kros JM, Zitterbart K, Bailey SD, Eberhart CG, Rao AAN, Giannini C, Olson JM, Garami M, Hauser P, Phillips JJ, Ra YS, de Torres C, Mora J, Li KKW, Ng HK, Poon WS, Pollack IF, López-Aguilar E, Gillespie GY, Van Meter TE, Shofuda T, Vibhakar R, Thompson RC, Cooper MK, Rubin JB, Kumabe T, Jung S, Lach B, Iolascon A, Ferrucci V, de Antonellis P, Zollo M, Cinalli G, Robinson S, Stearns DS, Van Meir EG, Porrati P, Finocchiaro G, Massimino M, Carlotti CG, Faria CC, Roussel MF, Boop F, Chan JA, Aldinger KA, Razavi F, Silvestri E, McLendon RE, Thompson EM, Ansari M, Garre ML, Chico F, Eguía P, Pérezpeña M, Morrissy AS, Cavalli FMG, Wu X, Daniels C, Rich JN, Jones SJM, Moore RA, Marra MA, Huang X, Reimand J, Sorensen PH, Wechsler-Reya RJ, Weiss WA, Pugh TJ, Garzia L, Kleinman CL, Stein LD, Jabado N, Malkin D, Ayrault O, Golden JA, Ellison DW, Doble B, Ramaswamy V, Werbowetski-Ogilvie TE, Suzuki H, Millen KJ, and Taylor MD
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- 2022
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27. Failure of human rhombic lip differentiation underlies medulloblastoma formation.
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Hendrikse LD, Haldipur P, Saulnier O, Millman J, Sjoboen AH, Erickson AW, Ong W, Gordon V, Coudière-Morrison L, Mercier AL, Shokouhian M, Suárez RA, Ly M, Borlase S, Scott DS, Vladoiu MC, Farooq H, Sirbu O, Nakashima T, Nambu S, Funakoshi Y, Bahcheli A, Diaz-Mejia JJ, Golser J, Bach K, Phuong-Bao T, Skowron P, Wang EY, Kumar SA, Balin P, Visvanathan A, Lee JJY, Ayoub R, Chen X, Chen X, Mungall KL, Luu B, Bérubé P, Wang YC, Pfister SM, Kim SK, Delattre O, Bourdeaut F, Doz F, Masliah-Planchon J, Grajkowska WA, Loukides J, Dirks P, Fèvre-Montange M, Jouvet A, French PJ, Kros JM, Zitterbart K, Bailey SD, Eberhart CG, Rao AAN, Giannini C, Olson JM, Garami M, Hauser P, Phillips JJ, Ra YS, de Torres C, Mora J, Li KKW, Ng HK, Poon WS, Pollack IF, López-Aguilar E, Gillespie GY, Van Meter TE, Shofuda T, Vibhakar R, Thompson RC, Cooper MK, Rubin JB, Kumabe T, Jung S, Lach B, Iolascon A, Ferrucci V, de Antonellis P, Zollo M, Cinalli G, Robinson S, Stearns DS, Van Meir EG, Porrati P, Finocchiaro G, Massimino M, Carlotti CG, Faria CC, Roussel MF, Boop F, Chan JA, Aldinger KA, Razavi F, Silvestri E, McLendon RE, Thompson EM, Ansari M, Garre ML, Chico F, Eguía P, Pérezpeña M, Morrissy AS, Cavalli FMG, Wu X, Daniels C, Rich JN, Jones SJM, Moore RA, Marra MA, Huang X, Reimand J, Sorensen PH, Wechsler-Reya RJ, Weiss WA, Pugh TJ, Garzia L, Kleinman CL, Stein LD, Jabado N, Malkin D, Ayrault O, Golden JA, Ellison DW, Doble B, Ramaswamy V, Werbowetski-Ogilvie TE, Suzuki H, Millen KJ, and Taylor MD
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- Cell Lineage, Cerebellum embryology, Cerebellum pathology, Core Binding Factor alpha Subunits genetics, Hedgehog Proteins metabolism, Histone Demethylases, Humans, Ki-67 Antigen metabolism, Muscle Proteins, Mutation, Otx Transcription Factors deficiency, Otx Transcription Factors genetics, Repressor Proteins, T-Box Domain Proteins metabolism, Transcription Factors, Cell Differentiation genetics, Cerebellar Neoplasms classification, Cerebellar Neoplasms genetics, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Medulloblastoma classification, Medulloblastoma genetics, Medulloblastoma pathology, Metencephalon embryology, Metencephalon pathology
- Abstract
Medulloblastoma (MB) comprises a group of heterogeneous paediatric embryonal neoplasms of the hindbrain with strong links to early development of the hindbrain
1-4 . Mutations that activate Sonic hedgehog signalling lead to Sonic hedgehog MB in the upper rhombic lip (RL) granule cell lineage5-8 . By contrast, mutations that activate WNT signalling lead to WNT MB in the lower RL9,10 . However, little is known about the more commonly occurring group 4 (G4) MB, which is thought to arise in the unipolar brush cell lineage3,4 . Here we demonstrate that somatic mutations that cause G4 MB converge on the core binding factor alpha (CBFA) complex and mutually exclusive alterations that affect CBFA2T2, CBFA2T3, PRDM6, UTX and OTX2. CBFA2T2 is expressed early in the progenitor cells of the cerebellar RL subventricular zone in Homo sapiens, and G4 MB transcriptionally resembles these progenitors but are stalled in developmental time. Knockdown of OTX2 in model systems relieves this differentiation blockade, which allows MB cells to spontaneously proceed along normal developmental differentiation trajectories. The specific nature of the split human RL, which is destined to generate most of the neurons in the human brain, and its high level of susceptible EOMES+ KI67+ unipolar brush cell progenitor cells probably predisposes our species to the development of G4 MB., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2022
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28. Aligning the Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS) histology groupings with current definitions.
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Waite KA, Cioffi G, Kruchko C, Patil N, Brat DJ, Bruner JM, McLendon RE, Tihan T, Ostrom QT, and Barnholtz-Sloan JS
- Abstract
Background: The Central Brain Tumor Registry of the United States (CBTRUS) uses a histology grouping model based on the World Health Organization (WHO) classifications to group records for clinically relevant statistical reporting. Newly identified genetic markers more accurately stratify patients than histology alone and were incorporated into the 2016 update to the WHO Classification., Methods: CBTRUS and consulting neuropathologists reviewed and aligned histology groupings with the 2016 WHO update. "Obsolete" (terms not currently in use) histology nomenclature along with their International Classification of Disease, Oncology 3rd edition (ICD-O-3) codes were identified, some histologies were reclassified to 2016 WHO, and new codes found in 2016 WHO were incorporated. An evaluation of the frequency of histology codes affected in the realignment process, and incidence and survival pre- and post-realignment was conducted., Results: After review, 67 codes were noted as obsolete, 51 codes were reclassified, and 12 new codes were incorporated. Histology groups most affected were mesenchymal tumors and neuronal/mixed neuronal-glial tumors. Reorganization resulted in 2588 (0.65%) cases with grouping reassignment or reporting change, indicating that the 2016 WHO Classification revision has impacted the collection and reporting of primary brain and other CNS tumors., Conclusion: This work demonstrates the need to be responsive to changes in classification and coding in order to ensure the most up-to-date and accurate statistics for brain and CNS tumors. This will require collaboration from all stakeholders within the brain tumor community, so to have the ability to reconcile clinical practices and surveillance requirements., (Published by Oxford University Press 2022.)
- Published
- 2022
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29. Central Nervous System Tumor Classification: An Update on the Integration of Tumor Genetics.
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McLendon RE, Yachnis AT, Miller CR, and Ng HK
- Subjects
- Humans, World Health Organization, Central Nervous System Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
- Abstract
In 2016, the World Health Organization Classification of CNS Tumors introduced molecular abnormalities that refined tumor diagnoses. Around this time, the introduction of large scale genetic mutational analyses quickly advanced our knowledge of recurrent abnormalities in disease. In 2017, the C-IMPACT group was established to render expert consensus opinions regarding the application of molecular findings into central nervous system tumor diagnoses. C-IMPACT have presented their recommendations in 7 peer-reviewed publications; this article details those recommendations that are expected to be incorporated into the upcoming fifth edition of the World Health Organization classification., Competing Interests: Disclosure H-K Ng is supported via grants from HMRF grant (07180736) of Food and Health Bureau, Hong Kong Government and also grant of Children Cancer Foundation, Hong Kong. The other authors have no conflicts to report., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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30. A Modified Nucleoside 6-Thio-2'-Deoxyguanosine Exhibits Antitumor Activity in Gliomas.
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Yu S, Wei S, Savani M, Lin X, Du K, Mender I, Siteni S, Vasilopoulos T, Reitman ZJ, Ku Y, Wu D, Liu H, Tian M, Chen Y, Labrie M, Charbonneau CM, Sugarman E, Bowie M, Hariharan S, Waitkus M, Jiang W, McLendon RE, Pan E, Khasraw M, Walsh KM, Lu Y, Herlyn M, Mills G, Herbig U, Wei Z, Keir ST, Flaherty K, Liu L, Wu K, Shay JW, Abdullah K, Zhang G, and Ashley DM
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Deoxyguanosine analogs & derivatives, Humans, Mice, Nucleosides therapeutic use, Proteomics, Thionucleosides, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Brain Neoplasms drug therapy, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Glioma drug therapy, Glioma genetics, Glioma pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the therapeutic role of a novel telomere-directed inhibitor, 6-thio-2'-deoxyguanosine (THIO) in gliomas both in vitro and in vivo ., Experimental Design: A panel of human and mouse glioma cell lines was used to test therapeutic efficacy of THIO using cell viability assays, flow cytometric analyses, and immunofluorescence. Integrated analyses of RNA sequencing and reverse-phase protein array data revealed the potential antitumor mechanisms of THIO. Four patient-derived xenografts (PDX), two patient-derived organoids (PDO), and two xenografts of human glioma cell lines were used to further investigate the therapeutic efficacy of THIO., Results: THIO was effective in the majority of human and mouse glioma cell lines with no obvious toxicity against normal astrocytes. THIO as a monotherapy demonstrated efficacy in three glioma cell lines that had acquired resistance to temozolomide. In addition, THIO showed efficacy in four human glioma cell lines grown as neurospheres by inducing apoptotic cell death. Mechanistically, THIO induced telomeric DNA damage not only in glioma cell lines but also in PDX tumor specimens. Integrated computational analyses of transcriptomic and proteomic data indicated that THIO significantly inhibited cell invasion, stem cell, and proliferation pathways while triggering DNA damage and apoptosis. Importantly, THIO significantly decreased tumor proliferation in two PDO models and reduced the tumor size of a glioblastoma xenograft and a PDX model., Conclusions: The current study established the therapeutic role of THIO in primary and recurrent gliomas and revealed the acute induction of telomeric DNA damage as a primary antitumor mechanism of THIO in gliomas., (©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2021
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31. Subgroup and subtype-specific outcomes in adult medulloblastoma.
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Coltin H, Sundaresan L, Smith KS, Skowron P, Massimi L, Eberhart CG, Schreck KC, Gupta N, Weiss WA, Tirapelli D, Carlotti C, Li KKW, Ryzhova M, Golanov A, Zheludkova O, Absalyamova O, Okonechnikov K, Stichel D, von Deimling A, Giannini C, Raskin S, Van Meir EG, Chan JA, Fults D, Chambless LB, Kim SK, Vasiljevic A, Faure-Conter C, Vibhakar R, Jung S, Leary S, Mora J, McLendon RE, Pollack IF, Hauser P, Grajkowska WA, Rubin JB, van Veelen MC, French PJ, Kros JM, Liau LM, Pfister SM, Kool M, Kijima N, Taylor MD, Packer RJ, Northcott PA, Korshunov A, and Ramaswamy V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Cerebellar Neoplasms mortality, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Medulloblastoma mortality, Medulloblastoma pathology, Progression-Free Survival, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Cerebellar Neoplasms genetics, Medulloblastoma genetics
- Abstract
Medulloblastoma, a common pediatric malignant central nervous system tumour, represent a small proportion of brain tumours in adults. Previously it has been shown that in adults, Sonic Hedgehog (SHH)-activated tumours predominate, with Wingless-type (WNT) and Group 4 being less common, but molecular risk stratification remains a challenge. We performed an integrated analysis consisting of genome-wide methylation profiling, copy number profiling, somatic nucleotide variants and correlation of clinical variables across a cohort of 191 adult medulloblastoma cases identified through the Medulloblastoma Advanced Genomics International Consortium. We identified 30 WNT, 112 SHH, 6 Group 3, and 41 Group 4 tumours. Patients with SHH tumours were significantly older at diagnosis compared to other subgroups (p < 0.0001). Five-year progression-free survival (PFS) for WNT, SHH, Group 3, and Group 4 tumours was 64.4 (48.0-86.5), 61.9% (51.6-74.2), 80.0% (95% CI 51.6-100.0), and 44.9% (95% CI 28.6-70.7), respectively (p = 0.06). None of the clinical variables (age, sex, metastatic status, extent of resection, chemotherapy, radiotherapy) were associated with subgroup-specific PFS. Survival among patients with SHH tumours was significantly worse for cases with chromosome 3p loss (HR 2.9, 95% CI 1.1-7.6; p = 0.02), chromosome 10q loss (HR 4.6, 95% CI 2.3-9.4; p < 0.0001), chromosome 17p loss (HR 2.3, 95% CI 1.1-4.8; p = 0.02), and PTCH1 mutations (HR 2.6, 95% CI 1.1-6.2; p = 0.04). The prognostic significance of 3p loss and 10q loss persisted in multivariable regression models. For Group 4 tumours, chromosome 8 loss was strongly associated with improved survival, which was validated in a non-overlapping cohort (combined cohort HR 0.2, 95% CI 0.1-0.7; p = 0.007). Unlike in pediatric medulloblastoma, whole chromosome 11 loss in Group 4 and chromosome 14q loss in SHH was not associated with improved survival, where MYCN, GLI2 and MYC amplification were rare. In sum, we report unique subgroup-specific cytogenetic features of adult medulloblastoma, which are distinct from those in younger patients, and correlate with survival disparities. Our findings suggest that clinical trials that incorporate new strategies tailored to high-risk adult medulloblastoma patients are urgently needed., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2021
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32. An Unusual Ganglioglioma with Pseudopapillary Features and PRKAR2B-BRAF Fusion.
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Oon ML, Low SYY, Kuick CH, Goh JY, Chang KTE, McLendon RE, and Tan CL
- Subjects
- Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Carcinoma, Papillary diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Papillary surgery, Child, Follow-Up Studies, Ganglioglioma diagnostic imaging, Ganglioglioma surgery, Humans, Male, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Carcinoma, Papillary genetics, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase RIIbeta Subunit genetics, Ganglioglioma genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics
- Published
- 2021
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33. Histologic maturation of cerebral neuroblastoma following conventional chemotherapy.
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Bidgoli A, McLendon RE, and Johnston JM
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- Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols, Humans, Neuroblastoma drug therapy, Supratentorial Neoplasms
- Published
- 2021
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34. The transcriptional landscape of Shh medulloblastoma.
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Skowron P, Farooq H, Cavalli FMG, Morrissy AS, Ly M, Hendrikse LD, Wang EY, Djambazian H, Zhu H, Mungall KL, Trinh QM, Zheng T, Dai S, Stucklin ASG, Vladoiu MC, Fong V, Holgado BL, Nor C, Wu X, Abd-Rabbo D, Bérubé P, Wang YC, Luu B, Suarez RA, Rastan A, Gillmor AH, Lee JJY, Zhang XY, Daniels C, Dirks P, Malkin D, Bouffet E, Tabori U, Loukides J, Doz FP, Bourdeaut F, Delattre OO, Masliah-Planchon J, Ayrault O, Kim SK, Meyronet D, Grajkowska WA, Carlotti CG, de Torres C, Mora J, Eberhart CG, Van Meir EG, Kumabe T, French PJ, Kros JM, Jabado N, Lach B, Pollack IF, Hamilton RL, Rao AAN, Giannini C, Olson JM, Bognár L, Klekner A, Zitterbart K, Phillips JJ, Thompson RC, Cooper MK, Rubin JB, Liau LM, Garami M, Hauser P, Li KKW, Ng HK, Poon WS, Yancey Gillespie G, Chan JA, Jung S, McLendon RE, Thompson EM, Zagzag D, Vibhakar R, Ra YS, Garre ML, Schüller U, Shofuda T, Faria CC, López-Aguilar E, Zadeh G, Hui CC, Ramaswamy V, Bailey SD, Jones SJ, Mungall AJ, Moore RA, Calarco JA, Stein LD, Bader GD, Reimand J, Ragoussis J, Weiss WA, Marra MA, Suzuki H, and Taylor MD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Gene Regulatory Networks, Genetic Variation, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Signal Transduction genetics, Young Adult, Cerebellar Neoplasms genetics, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Hedgehog Proteins genetics, Medulloblastoma genetics, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Sonic hedgehog medulloblastoma encompasses a clinically and molecularly diverse group of cancers of the developing central nervous system. Here, we use unbiased sequencing of the transcriptome across a large cohort of 250 tumors to reveal differences among molecular subtypes of the disease, and demonstrate the previously unappreciated importance of non-coding RNA transcripts. We identify alterations within the cAMP dependent pathway (GNAS, PRKAR1A) which converge on GLI2 activity and show that 18% of tumors have a genetic event that directly targets the abundance and/or stability of MYCN. Furthermore, we discover an extensive network of fusions in focally amplified regions encompassing GLI2, and several loss-of-function fusions in tumor suppressor genes PTCH1, SUFU and NCOR1. Molecular convergence on a subset of genes by nucleotide variants, copy number aberrations, and gene fusions highlight the key roles of specific pathways in the pathogenesis of Sonic hedgehog medulloblastoma and open up opportunities for therapeutic intervention.
- Published
- 2021
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35. Clinical Outcomes and Patient-Matched Molecular Composition of Relapsed Medulloblastoma.
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Kumar R, Smith KS, Deng M, Terhune C, Robinson GW, Orr BA, Liu APY, Lin T, Billups CA, Chintagumpala M, Bowers DC, Hassall TE, Hansford JR, Khuong-Quang DA, Crawford JR, Bendel AE, Gururangan S, Schroeder K, Bouffet E, Bartels U, Fisher MJ, Cohn R, Partap S, Kellie SJ, McCowage G, Paulino AC, Rutkowski S, Fleischhack G, Dhall G, Klesse LJ, Leary S, Nazarian J, Kool M, Wesseling P, Ryzhova M, Zheludkova O, Golanov AV, McLendon RE, Packer RJ, Dunham C, Hukin J, Fouladi M, Faria CC, Pimentel J, Walter AW, Jabado N, Cho YJ, Perreault S, Croul SE, Zapotocky M, Hawkins C, Tabori U, Taylor MD, Pfister SM, Klimo P Jr, Boop FA, Ellison DW, Merchant TE, Onar-Thomas A, Korshunov A, Jones DTW, Gajjar A, Ramaswamy V, and Northcott PA
- Subjects
- Cerebellar Neoplasms mortality, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Cerebellar Neoplasms therapy, Child, Child, Preschool, Clinical Trials as Topic, Disease Progression, Epigenome, Epigenomics, Female, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Infant, Male, Medulloblastoma mortality, Medulloblastoma secondary, Medulloblastoma therapy, Retreatment, Time Factors, Treatment Outcome, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Cerebellar Neoplasms genetics, DNA Methylation, Medulloblastoma genetics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
- Abstract
Purpose: We sought to investigate clinical outcomes of relapsed medulloblastoma and to compare molecular features between patient-matched diagnostic and relapsed tumors., Methods: Children and infants enrolled on either SJMB03 (NCT00085202) or SJYC07 (NCT00602667) trials who experienced medulloblastoma relapse were analyzed for clinical outcomes, including anatomic and temporal patterns of relapse and postrelapse survival. A largely independent, paired molecular cohort was analyzed by DNA methylation array and next-generation sequencing., Results: A total of 72 of 329 (22%) SJMB03 and 52 of 79 (66%) SJYC07 patients experienced relapse with significant representation of Group 3 and wingless tumors. Although most patients exhibited some distal disease (79%), 38% of patients with sonic hedgehog tumors experienced isolated local relapse. Time to relapse and postrelapse survival varied by molecular subgroup with longer latencies for patients with Group 4 tumors. Postrelapse radiation therapy among previously nonirradiated SJYC07 patients was associated with long-term survival. Reirradiation was only temporizing for SJMB03 patients. Among 127 patients with patient-matched tumor pairs, 9 (7%) experienced subsequent nonmedulloblastoma CNS malignancies. Subgroup (96%) and subtype (80%) stabilities were largely maintained among the remainder. Rare subgroup divergence was observed from Group 4 to Group 3 tumors, which is coincident with genetic alterations involving MYC , MYCN , and FBXW7 . Subgroup-specific patterns of alteration were identified for driver genes and chromosome arms., Conclusion: Clinical behavior of relapsed medulloblastoma must be contextualized in terms of up-front therapies and molecular classifications. Group 4 tumors exhibit slower biological progression. Utility of radiation at relapse is dependent on patient age and prior treatments. Degree and patterns of molecular conservation at relapse vary by subgroup. Relapse tissue enables verification of molecular targets and identification of occult secondary malignancies.
- Published
- 2021
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36. Very low mutation burden is a feature of inflamed recurrent glioblastomas responsive to cancer immunotherapy.
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Gromeier M, Brown MC, Zhang G, Lin X, Chen Y, Wei Z, Beaubier N, Yan H, He Y, Desjardins A, Herndon JE 2nd, Varn FS, Verhaak RG, Zhao J, Bolognesi DP, Friedman AH, Friedman HS, McSherry F, Muscat AM, Lipp ES, Nair SK, Khasraw M, Peters KB, Randazzo D, Sampson JH, McLendon RE, Bigner DD, and Ashley DM
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Cohort Studies, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Genomics methods, Glioblastoma genetics, Glioblastoma pathology, Humans, Inflammation genetics, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Proportional Hazards Models, Survival Analysis, Brain Neoplasms therapy, Glioblastoma therapy, Immunotherapy methods, Mutation, Oncolytic Virotherapy methods
- Abstract
Several immunotherapy clinical trials in recurrent glioblastoma have reported long-term survival benefits in 10-20% of patients. Here we perform genomic analysis of tumor tissue from recurrent WHO grade IV glioblastoma patients acquired prior to immunotherapy intervention. We report that very low tumor mutation burden is associated with longer survival after recombinant polio virotherapy or after immune checkpoint blockade in recurrent glioblastoma patients. A relationship between tumor mutation burden and survival is not observed in cohorts of immunotherapy naïve newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma patients. Transcriptomic analyses reveal an inverse relationship between tumor mutation burden and enrichment of inflammatory gene signatures in cohorts of recurrent, but not newly diagnosed glioblastoma tumors, implying that a relationship between tumor mutation burden and tumor-intrinsic inflammation evolves upon recurrence.
- Published
- 2021
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37. Pattern of Relapse and Treatment Response in WNT-Activated Medulloblastoma.
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Nobre L, Zapotocky M, Khan S, Fukuoka K, Fonseca A, McKeown T, Sumerauer D, Vicha A, Grajkowska WA, Trubicka J, Li KKW, Ng HK, Massimi L, Lee JY, Kim SK, Zelcer S, Vasiljevic A, Faure-Conter C, Hauser P, Lach B, van Veelen-Vincent ML, French PJ, Van Meir EG, Weiss WA, Gupta N, Pollack IF, Hamilton RL, Nageswara Rao AA, Giannini C, Rubin JB, Moore AS, Chambless LB, Vibhakar R, Ra YS, Massimino M, McLendon RE, Wheeler H, Zollo M, Ferruci V, Kumabe T, Faria CC, Sterba J, Jung S, López-Aguilar E, Mora J, Carlotti CG, Olson JM, Leary S, Cain J, Krskova L, Zamecnik J, Hawkins CE, Tabori U, Huang A, Bartels U, Northcott PA, Taylor MD, Yip S, Hansford JR, Bouffet E, and Ramaswamy V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Child, Cyclophosphamide therapeutic use, Female, Humans, Ifosfamide therapeutic use, Male, Medulloblastoma metabolism, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local metabolism, Progression-Free Survival, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Cerebellar Neoplasms drug therapy, Medulloblastoma drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy
- Abstract
Over the past decade, wingless-activated (WNT) medulloblastoma has been identified as a candidate for therapy de-escalation based on excellent survival; however, a paucity of relapses has precluded additional analyses of markers of relapse. To address this gap in knowledge, an international cohort of 93 molecularly confirmed WNT MB was assembled, where 5-year progression-free survival is 0.84 (95%, 0.763-0.925) with 15 relapsed individuals identified. Maintenance chemotherapy is identified as a strong predictor of relapse, with individuals receiving high doses of cyclophosphamide or ifosphamide having only one very late molecularly confirmed relapse (p = 0.032). The anatomical location of recurrence is metastatic in 12 of 15 relapses, with 8 of 12 metastatic relapses in the lateral ventricles. Maintenance chemotherapy, specifically cumulative cyclophosphamide doses, is a significant predictor of relapse across WNT MB. Future efforts to de-escalate therapy need to carefully consider not only the radiation dose but also the chemotherapy regimen and the propensity for metastatic relapses., Competing Interests: DECLARATION OF INTERESTS The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2020
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38. The integrated genomic and epigenomic landscape of brainstem glioma.
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Chen LH, Pan C, Diplas BH, Xu C, Hansen LJ, Wu Y, Chen X, Geng Y, Sun T, Sun Y, Zhang P, Wu Z, Zhang J, Li D, Zhang Y, Wu W, Wang Y, Li G, Yang J, Wang X, Xu C, Wang S, Waitkus MS, He Y, McLendon RE, Ashley DM, Yan H, and Zhang L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain Stem Neoplasms mortality, Child, Child, Preschool, Cluster Analysis, DNA Methylation, Epigenesis, Genetic, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Genomics, Glioma mortality, Humans, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Brain Stem Neoplasms genetics, Epigenome, Glioma genetics
- Abstract
Brainstem gliomas are a heterogeneous group of tumors that encompass both benign tumors cured with surgical resection and highly lethal cancers with no efficacious therapies. We perform a comprehensive study incorporating epigenetic and genomic analyses on a large cohort of brainstem gliomas, including Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Gliomas. Here we report, from DNA methylation data, distinct clusters termed H3-Pons, H3-Medulla, IDH, and PA-like, each associated with unique genomic and clinical profiles. The majority of tumors within H3-Pons and-H3-Medulla harbors H3F3A mutations but shows distinct methylation patterns that correlate with anatomical localization within the pons or medulla, respectively. Clinical data show significantly different overall survival between these clusters, and pathway analysis demonstrates different oncogenic mechanisms in these samples. Our findings indicate that the integration of genetic and epigenetic data can facilitate better understanding of brainstem gliomagenesis and classification, and guide future studies for the development of novel treatments for this disease.
- Published
- 2020
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39. Targeting PD-L1 Initiates Effective Antitumor Immunity in a Murine Model of Cushing Disease.
- Author
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Kemeny HR, Elsamadicy AA, Farber SH, Champion CD, Lorrey SJ, Chongsathidkiet P, Woroniecka KI, Cui X, Shen SH, Rhodin KE, Tsvankin V, Everitt J, Sanchez-Perez L, Healy P, McLendon RE, Codd PJ, Dunn IF, and Fecci PE
- Subjects
- Adenoma drug therapy, Adenoma immunology, Adenoma pathology, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Cell Line, Tumor, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Humans, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Middle Aged, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion immunology, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion pathology, Pituitary Neoplasms immunology, Pituitary Neoplasms pathology, Survival Rate, Young Adult, Antibodies, Monoclonal pharmacology, B7-H1 Antigen antagonists & inhibitors, B7-H1 Antigen metabolism, Immunotherapy methods, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion drug therapy, Pituitary Neoplasms drug therapy, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
Purpose: Although pituitary adenoma is classified as benign, Cushing disease is associated with significant morbidity due to the numerous sequelae of elevated cortisol levels. Successful therapy for Cushing disease remains elusive due to high rates of treatment-refractory recurrence. The frequent emergence of lymphocytic hypophysitis following checkpoint blockade for other cancers, as well as the expression of PD-L1 on pituitary adenomas, suggest a role for immunotherapy., Experimental Design: This study confirms PD-L1 expression on functioning pituitary adenomas and is the first to evaluate the efficacy of checkpoint blockade (anti-PD-L1) therapy in a preclinical model of Cushing disease., Results: Herein, treatment with anti-PD-L1 was successful in reducing adrenocorticotropic hormone plasma levels, decreasing tumor growth, and increasing survival in our model. Furthermore, tumor-infiltrating T cells demonstrated a pattern of checkpoint expression similar to other checkpoint blockade-susceptible tumors., Conclusions: This suggests that immunotherapy, particularly blockade of the PD1/PD-L1 axis, may be a novel therapeutic option for refractory Cushing disease. Clinical investigation is encouraged., (©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2020
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40. Performance of a nomogram for IDH-wild-type glioblastoma patient survival in an elderly cohort.
- Author
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Shen E, Johnson MO, Lee JW, Lipp ES, Randazzo DM, Desjardins A, McLendon RE, Friedman HS, Ashley DM, Kirkpatrick JP, Peters KB, and Walsh KM
- Published
- 2019
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41. Recurrent Extradural Myxopapillary Ependymoma With Oligometastatic Spread.
- Author
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Batich KA, Riedel RF, Kirkpatrick JP, Tong BC, Eward WC, Tan CL, Pittman PD, McLendon RE, and Peters KB
- Abstract
Myxopapillary ependymomas are a slow-growing, grade I type glial tumor in the lumbosacral region. More rarely, they can present as extradural, subcutaneous sacrococcygeal, or perisacral masses, and it is under these circumstances that they are more likely to spread. Here, we report the presentation of a sacrococcygeal mass in patient that was initially resected confirming extradural myxopapillary ependymoma. At initial resection, multiple small pulmonary nodules were detected. This mass recurred 2 years later at the resection site with an interval increase in the previously imaged pulmonary nodules. Resection of both the post-sacral mass and largest lung metastasis confirmed recurrent myxopapillary ependymoma with oligometastatic spread. Because these tumors are rare, with extradural presentation being even more infrequent, to this date there are no definitive therapeutic guidelines for initial treatment and continued surveillance. For myxopapillary ependymoma, current standard of care is first-line maximal surgical resection with or without postoperative radiotherapy depending on the extent of disease and extent of resection. However, there remains insufficient evidence on the role of radiotherapy to oligometastatic foci in providing any further survival benefit or extending time to recurrence. Thus, prospective studies assessing the role of upfront treatment of oligometastases with local resection and adjuvant radiotherapy are needed for improved understanding of extradural myxopapillary ependymoma., (Copyright © 2019 Batich, Riedel, Kirkpatrick, Tong, Eward, Tan, Pittman, McLendon and Peters.)
- Published
- 2019
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42. Glioneuronal Tumor With Features of Ganglioglioma and Neurocytoma Arising in the Fourth Ventricle: A Report of 2 Unusual Cases and a Review of Infratentorial Gangliogliomas.
- Author
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Harrison W, Elsamadicy AA, McMahon JT, Chagoya G, Sobel RA, McLendon RE, and Adamson C
- Subjects
- Aged, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Fourth Ventricle diagnostic imaging, Ganglioglioma diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neurocytoma diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms pathology, Fourth Ventricle pathology, Ganglioglioma pathology, Neurocytoma pathology
- Abstract
Infratentorial glioneuronal neoplasms are overall quite rare and are more commonly low-grade with surgical excision usually being curative. Multiple distinct histologic entities have been described including rosette-forming glioneuronal tumor, papillary glioneuronal tumor, neurocytoma, dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum (Lhermitte-Duclos disease), cerebellar liponeurocytoma, and ganglioglioma. While each of these entities has distinct findings, in some instances a tumor may demonstrate overlapping histologic features with mixed components. Herein, we report 2 unusual adult cases of a fourth ventricular glioneuronal tumor with features of ganglioglioma and neurocytoma, with one coming from a surgical resection and one found incidentally at autopsy. To the best of our knowledge, this specific histologic combination has not previously been described. As such, the clinical significance is unknown although in both cases the neoplasms were circumscribed and appeared to be low grade. The presence of the gangliogliomatous component was of particular interest since these are extremely rare occurrences in the fourth ventricle and we provide a comprehensive review of infratentorial gangliogliomas., (© 2019 American Association of Neuropathologists, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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43. MTAP Loss Promotes Stemness in Glioblastoma and Confers Unique Susceptibility to Purine Starvation.
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Hansen LJ, Sun R, Yang R, Singh SX, Chen LH, Pirozzi CJ, Moure CJ, Hemphill C, Carpenter AB, Healy P, Ruger RC, Chen CJ, Greer PK, Zhao F, Spasojevic I, Grenier C, Huang Z, Murphy SK, McLendon RE, Friedman HS, Friedman AH, Herndon JE 2nd, Sampson JH, Keir ST, Bigner DD, Yan H, and He Y
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Cell Proliferation, Glioblastoma genetics, Glioblastoma metabolism, Humans, Mice, Neoplastic Stem Cells metabolism, Prognosis, Purine-Nucleoside Phosphorylase genetics, Survival Rate, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Glioblastoma pathology, Neoplastic Stem Cells pathology, Purine-Nucleoside Phosphorylase metabolism, Purines metabolism
- Abstract
Homozygous deletion of methylthioadenosine phosphorylase ( MTAP ) is one of the most frequent genetic alterations in glioblastoma (GBM), but its pathologic consequences remain unclear. In this study, we report that loss of MTAP results in profound epigenetic reprogramming characterized by hypomethylation of PROM1 /CD133-associated stem cell regulatory pathways. MTAP deficiency promotes glioma stem-like cell (GSC) formation with increased expression of PROM1 /CD133 and enhanced tumorigenicity of GBM cells and is associated with poor prognosis in patients with GBM. As a combined consequence of purine production deficiency in MTAP -null GBM and the critical dependence of GSCs on purines, the enriched subset of CD133
+ cells in MTAP -null GBM can be effectively depleted by inhibition of de novo purine synthesis. These findings suggest that MTAP loss promotes the pathogenesis of GBM by shaping the epigenetic landscape and stemness of GBM cells while simultaneously providing a unique opportunity for GBM therapeutics. SIGNIFICANCE: This study links the frequently mutated metabolic enzyme MTAP to dysregulated epigenetics and cancer cell stemness and establishes MTAP status as a factor for consideration in characterizing GBM and developing therapeutic strategies., (©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.)- Published
- 2019
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44. Sensitive and rapid detection of TERT promoter and IDH mutations in diffuse gliomas.
- Author
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Diplas BH, Liu H, Yang R, Hansen LJ, Zachem AL, Zhao F, Bigner DD, McLendon RE, Jiao Y, He Y, Waitkus MS, and Yan H
- Subjects
- Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis methods, Humans, Mutation, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Glioma genetics, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase genetics, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Telomerase genetics
- Abstract
Background: Mutations in telomerase reverse transcriptase promoter (TERTp) and isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 (IDH) offer objective markers to assist in classifying diffuse gliomas into genetic subgroups. However, traditional mutation detection techniques lack sensitivity or have long turnaround times or high costs. We developed GliomaDx, an allele-specific, locked nucleic acid-based quantitative PCR assay to overcome these limitations and sensitively detect TERTp and IDH mutations., Methods: We evaluated the performance of GliomaDx on cell line DNA and frozen tissue diffuse glioma samples with variable tumor percentage to mimic use in clinical settings and validated low percentage variants using sensitive techniques including droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) and next-generation sequencing. We also developed GliomaDx Nest, which incorporates a high-fidelity multiplex pre-amplification step prior to allele-specific PCR for low-input formalin-fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) samples., Results: GliomaDx detects the TERTp and IDH1 alterations at an analytical sensitivity of 0.1% mutant allele fraction, corresponding to 0.2% tumor cellularity. GliomaDx identified TERTp/IDH1 alterations in a cohort of frozen tissue samples with variable tumor percentage of all major diffuse glioma histologic types. GliomaDx Nest is able to detect these hotspot mutations with similar sensitivity from pre-amplified samples and was successfully tested on a cohort of clinical FFPE samples. Testing of a cohort of previously identified TERTpWT-IDHWT gliomas (by Sanger sequencing) revealed that 26.3% harbored low-percentage mutations. Analysis by ddPCR and whole exome sequencing of these tumors confirmed the low mutant fraction of these alterations and overall mutation-based tumor purity., Conclusions: Our results show that GliomaDx can rapidly detect TERTp/IDH mutations with high sensitivity, identifying cases that might be missed due to the lack of sensitivity of other techniques. This approach may facilitate more objective classification of diffuse glioma samples in clinical settings such as intraoperative diagnosis or in testing cases with low tumor purity., (© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Neuro-Oncology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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45. Genomic analysis demonstrates that histologically-defined astroblastomas are molecularly heterogeneous and that tumors with MN1 rearrangement exhibit the most favorable prognosis.
- Author
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Lehman NL, Usubalieva A, Lin T, Allen SJ, Tran QT, Mobley BC, McLendon RE, Schniederjan MJ, Georgescu MM, Couce M, Dulai MS, Raisanen JM, Al Abbadi M, Palmer CA, Hattab EM, and Orr BA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Brain Neoplasms mortality, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms, Neuroepithelial mortality, Neoplasms, Neuroepithelial pathology, Prognosis, Survival Rate trends, Young Adult, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Gene Rearrangement genetics, Genomics methods, Neoplasms, Neuroepithelial genetics, Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf genetics, Trans-Activators genetics, Tumor Suppressor Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Astroblastoma (AB) is a rare CNS tumor demonstrating abundant astroblastomatous pseudorosettes. Its molecular features have not been comprehensively studied and its status as a tumor entity is controversial. We analyzed a cohort of 27 histologically-defined ABs using DNA methylation profiling, copy number analysis, FISH and site-directed sequencing. Most cases demonstrated mutually exclusive MN1 rearrangements (n = 10) or BRAF
V600E mutations (n = 7). Two additional cases harbored RELA rearrangements. Other cases lacked these specific genetic alterations (n = 8). By DNA methylation profiling, tumors with MN1 or RELA rearrangement clustered with high-grade neuroepithelial tumor with MN1 alteration (HGNET-MN1) and RELA-fusion ependymoma, respectively. In contrast, BRAFV600E -mutant tumors grouped with pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA). Six additional tumors clustered with either supratentorial pilocytic astrocytoma and ganglioglioma (LGG-PA/GG-ST), normal or reactive cerebrum, or with no defined DNA methylation class. While certain histologic features favored one genetic group over another, no group could be reliably distinguished by histopathology alone. Survival analysis between genetic AB subtypes was limited by sample size, but showed that MN1-rearranged AB tumors were characterized by better overall survival compared to other genetic subtypes, in fact, significantly better than BRAFV600E -mutant tumors (P = 0.013). Our data confirm that histologically-defined ABs are molecularly heterogeneous and do not represent a single entity. They rather encompass several low- to higher-grade glial tumors including neuroepithelial tumors with MN1 rearrangement, PXA-like tumors, RELA ependymomas, and possibly yet uncharacterized lesions. Genetic subtyping of tumors exhibiting AB histology, particularly determination of MN1 and BRAFV600E status, is necessary for important prognostic and possible treatment implications.- Published
- 2019
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46. Two Extraordinary Sellar Neuronal Tumors: Literature Review and Comparison of Clinicopathologic Features.
- Author
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Tan CL, Pang YH, Lim KHC, Sein L, Codd PJ, and McLendon RE
- Subjects
- Adenoma classification, Adenoma diagnostic imaging, Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Neuroendocrine Tumors classification, Neuroendocrine Tumors diagnostic imaging, Paraganglioma classification, Paraganglioma diagnostic imaging, Pituitary Neoplasms classification, Pituitary Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Sella Turcica diagnostic imaging, Sella Turcica pathology, World Health Organization, Adenoma pathology, Neuroendocrine Tumors pathology, Paraganglioma pathology, Pituitary Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Objectives: The list of tumors involving the pituitary gland has been expanded to include a variety of neuronal and paraneuronal tumors in the 2017 World Health Organization tumor classification of endocrine organs. All the entities included in this category are distinctly rare, with limited case reports in the literature., Methods: We illustrate two extraordinary sellar tumors with neuronal differentiation: a sellar paraganglioma and a sellar neurocytoma, with thorough literature review and comparison of the clinicopathologic features of these entities., Results: Both entities are exceptionally rare and tend to be misdiagnosed as pituitary adenoma preoperatively. Both entities demonstrate frequent clinical recurrence compared with pituitary adenoma, as well as the rare occurrence of metastatic disease., Conclusions: In evaluating a sellar tumor with an uncommon morphology and neuroendocrine differentiation, an increased awareness of the unusual entities that may involve the sellar region and a judicious panel of immunohistochemical studies should improve the diagnosis.
- Published
- 2019
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47. Intraventricular Pilocytic Astrocytoma With KIAA1549/BRAF Fusion Arising in a 44-Year Old.
- Author
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Ahn JS, Harrison W, Hughes E, and McLendon RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Astrocytoma genetics, Astrocytoma pathology, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms genetics, Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms pathology, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics
- Abstract
Rare pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) have been described to arise in the ventricles of children. They are even less common in this location for the adult population. We present the case of a 44-year old man presenting with vision and mental status changes. Brain imaging revealed an intraventricular mass within the right ventricular atrium, most consistent with a meningioma. Microscopic examination revealed a neoplasm composed of elongated to plump bipolar astrocytes arranged in a fascicular architecture, accompanied by foci containing numerous Rosenthal fibers. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells were positive for vimentin and glial fibrillary acid protein, whereas negative for epithelial membrane antigen. Isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (R132H) was also negative. By fluorescence in situ hybridization, we detected a KIAA1549/BRAF fusion gene. These findings supported the diagnosis of intraventricular PA arising in an adult.
- Published
- 2019
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48. MGMT: Immunohistochemical Detection in High-Grade Astrocytomas.
- Author
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Lipp ES, Healy P, Austin A, Clark A, Dalton T, Perkinson K, Herndon JE, Friedman HS, Friedman AH, Bigner DD, and McLendon RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, DNA Methylation, DNA Modification Methylases genetics, DNA Repair Enzymes genetics, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Tumor Suppressor Proteins genetics, Astrocytoma genetics, Biomarkers, Tumor analysis, Brain Neoplasms genetics, DNA Modification Methylases analysis, DNA Repair Enzymes analysis, Immunohistochemistry methods, Tumor Suppressor Proteins analysis
- Abstract
Glioma therapeutic resistance to alkylating chemotherapy is mediated via O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT). We hypothesized that a CD45/HAM56/MGMT double-stained cocktail would improve MGMT discrimination in tumor cells versus inflammatory and endothelial cells (IEC). Total MGMT protein was quantified by IHC on 982 glioblastomas (GBM) and 199 anaplastic astrocytomas. Correcting for IEC was done by a CD45/HAM56/MGMT 2-color cocktail. Lowest IEC infiltrates (IEC "cold spots") were identified to quantitate MGMT as well as the percentage of IEC% in the IEC cold spots. MGMT promoter methylation (PM) was also determined. Among the GBM biopsies, mean uncorrected and corrected MGMT% were 19.87 (range 0-90) and 16.67; mean IEC% was 18.65 (range 1-80). Four hundred and fifty one (45.9%) GBM biopsies were positive MGMT PM. Both uncorrected and corrected MGMT% positivity correlated with PM. All 3 MGMT scores correlated with overall survival (OS) in GBM's. Cold spot IEC% was also positively associated with OS. These effects remained in a multivariate model after adjusting for age and disease status. Prognosis determined by correcting MGMT% score for IEC% is not improved in this analysis. However, IEC COLD SPOT score does provide additional prognostic information that can be gained from this correction method.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Tissue is the Issue: Biomarkers of Prognosis and Classification in Adult Gliomas.
- Author
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Lipp ES and McLendon RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Risk Factors, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Brain Neoplasms classification, Brain Neoplasms genetics, Glioma classification, Glioma genetics
- Abstract
Objective: To explain several biomarkers used in primary adult brain tumor diagnosis and the methodologies for their application., Data Sources: Peer-reviewed literature., Conclusion: In the past few years, several biomarkers have been touted as providing reliable and objective assays of histogenesis, prognosis, and therapeutic sensitivity. A number of these markers have failed the test of time and rigorous practice applications. More recently, assays with diagnostic applications have been reported and validated from multiple laboratories using large numbers of patients in routine clinical practices., Implications for Nursing Practice: This article provides a reference for biomarker tests for gliomas. There is a greater need for nurses to understand the translational interface between basic science and clinical medicine to determine the applications of these biomarkers for the best interests of their patients., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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50. Molecular profiling of different glioma specimens from an Ollier disease patient suggests a multifocal disease process in the setting of IDH mosaicism.
- Author
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Tan CL, Vellayappan B, Wu B, Yeo TT, and McLendon RE
- Subjects
- Adult, Astrocytoma diagnostic imaging, Astrocytoma pathology, Astrocytoma surgery, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Enchondromatosis diagnostic imaging, Enchondromatosis pathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Young Adult, Astrocytoma etiology, Brain Neoplasms etiology, Enchondromatosis complications, Enchondromatosis genetics, Isocitrate Dehydrogenase genetics, Mosaicism
- Abstract
Ollier disease (OD) and Maffucci syndrome are rare conditions due to a post-zygotic somatic mutation that results in mosaicism. In addition to enchondromas and hemangiomas, some of these patients also develop other unrelated tumors, such as gliomas, that harbor IDH mutations, suggesting that an IDH mutation is a common genetic event in the tumorigenesis in this group of patients. We illustrate an interesting case of multifocal IDH-mutant astrocytomas in an OD patient with 8 years of follow-up. We first demonstrated identical IDH mutations in the brain tumor samples from various locations in this patient, but different 1p,19q results by fluorescent in-situ hybridization, different whole genome copy number profiles by OncoScan analysis, and a discrepant IDH2M131I mutation unique to one tumor, supporting a multifocal disease process in the setting of somatic IDH mosaicism.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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