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Genetic Alterations in Gliosarcoma and Giant Cell Glioblastoma

Authors :
Naosuke Nonoguchi
Takashi Ohta
Anne Vital
Werner Paulus
Felice Giangaspero
Daniela Pierscianek
Kaishi Satomi
Ulrich Sure
David Capper
Manila Antonelli
Michel Mittelbronn
Hiroko Ohgaki
Paul Kleihues
Ji Eun Oh
Source :
Brain Pathology. 26:517-522
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

The majority of glioblastomas develop rapidly with a short clinical history (primary glioblastoma IDH wild-type), whereas secondary glioblastomas progress from diffuse astrocytoma or anaplastic astrocytoma. IDH mutations are the genetic hallmark of secondary glioblastomas. Gliosarcomas and giant cell glioblastomas are rare histological glioblastoma variants, which usually develop rapidly. We determined the genetic patterns of 36 gliosarcomas and 19 giant cell glioblastomas. IDH1 and IDH2 mutations were absent in all 36 gliosarcomas and in 18 of 19 giant cell glioblastomas analyzed, indicating that they are histological variants of primary glioblastoma. Furthermore, LOH 10q (88%) and TERT promoter mutations (83%) were frequent in gliosarcomas. Copy number profiling using the 450k methylome array in 5 gliosarcomas revealed CDKN2A homozygous deletion (3 cases), trisomy chromosome 7 (2 cases), and monosomy chromosome 10 (2 cases). Giant cell glioblastomas had LOH 10q in 50% and LOH 19q in 42% of cases. ATRX loss was detected immunohistochemically in 19% of giant cell glioblastomas, but absent in 17 gliosarcomas. These and previous results suggest that gliosarcomas are a variant of, and genetically similar to, primary glioblastomas, except for a lack of EGFR amplification, while giant cell glioblastoma occupies a hybrid position between primary and secondary glioblastomas.

Details

ISSN :
10156305
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........635ae717b89c0e0644bbf6bb77062a9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/bpa.12328