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A comprehensive histomolecular characterization of meningioangiomatosis: Further evidence for a precursor neoplastic lesion.

Authors :
Tauziède‐Espariat, Arnault
Masliah‐Planchon, Julien
Sievers, Philipp
Sahm, Felix
Dangouloff‐Ros, Volodia
Boddaert, Nathalie
Hasty, Lauren
Aboubakr, Oumaima
Métais, Alice
Chrétien, Fabrice
Roux, Alexandre
Pallud, Johan
Blauwblomme, Thomas
Beccaria, Kévin
Bourdeaut, Franck
Puget, Stéphanie
Varlet, Pascale
Source :
Brain Pathology. Nov2024, Vol. 34 Issue 6, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Meningioangiomatosis (MAM) remains a poorly understood lesion responsible for epileptic disease. In the past, MAM was primarily described in the context of neurofibromatosis type 2 before being mainly reported sporadically. Moreover, the malformative or tumoral nature is still debated. Because a subset of MAM are associated with meningiomas, some authors argue that MAM corresponds to an infiltration pattern of these tumors. For these reasons, MAM has not been added to the World Health Organization (WHO) Classification of Central Nervous System Tumors as a specific entity. In the present study, we characterized a series of pure MAM (n = 7) and MAM associated with meningiomas (n = 4) using histopathology, immunohistochemistry, genetic (fluorescent in situ and DNA sequencing analyses), and epigenetic (DNA‐methylation profiling) data. We evidenced two distinct morphological patterns: MAM with a fibroblastic‐like pattern having few lesional cells, and MAM with a more cellular pattern. A subset was associated with the genetic alterations previously reported in meningiomas (such as a KMT2C mutation and a hemizygous deletion of chromosome 22q including the NF2 gene). The DNA‐methylation profile, using a t‐distributed stochastic neighbor embedding analysis, evidenced that MAM (pure or associated with meningiomas) clustered in a separate group from pediatric meningiomas. The present results seem to suggest that MAM represents a neoplastic lesion and encourage the further study of similar additional series so that it may be included in a future WHO classification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10156305
Volume :
34
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Brain Pathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180336913
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bpa.13259