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A Translational Approach to Spinal Neurofibromatosis: Clinical and Molecular Insights from a Wide Italian Cohort

Authors :
Rosina Paterra
Paola Bettinaglio
Arianna Borghi
Eleonora Mangano
Viviana Tritto
Claudia Cesaretti
Carla Schettino
Roberta Bordoni
Claudia Santoro
Sabrina Avignone
Marco Moscatelli
Mariarosa Anna Beatrice Melone
Veronica Saletti
Giulio Piluso
Federica Natacci
Paola Riva
Marica Eoli
Paterra, Rosina
Bettinaglio, Paola
Borghi, Arianna
Mangano, Eleonora
Tritto, Viviana
Cesaretti, Claudia
Schettino, Carla
Bordoni, Roberta
Santoro, Claudia
Avignone, Sabrina
Moscatelli, Marco
Melone, Mariarosa Anna Beatrice
Saletti, Veronica
Piluso, Giulio
Natacci, Federica
Riva, Paola
Eoli, Marica
Source :
Cancers; Volume 15; Issue 1; Pages: 59
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Spinal neurofibromatosis (SNF), a phenotypic subclass of neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1), is characterized by bilateral neurofibromas involving all spinal roots. In order to deepen the understanding of SNF’s clinical and genetic features, we identified 81 patients with SNF, 55 from unrelated families, and 26 belonging to 19 families with at least 1 member affected by SNF, and 106 NF1 patients aged >30 years without spinal tumors. A comprehensive NF1 mutation screening was performed using NGS panels, including NF1 and several RAS pathway genes. The main features of the SNF subjects were a higher number of internal neurofibromas (p < 0.001), nerve root swelling (p < 0.001), and subcutaneous neurofibromas (p = 0.03), while hyperpigmentation signs were significantly less frequent compared with the classical NF1-affected cohorts (p = 0.012). Fifteen patients underwent neurosurgical intervention. The histological findings revealed neurofibromas in 13 patients and ganglioneuromas in 2 patients. Phenotypic variability within SNF families was observed. The proportion of missense mutations was higher in the SNF cases than in the classical NF1 group (21.40% vs. 7.5%, p = 0.007), conferring an odds ratio (OR) of 3.34 (CI = 1.33–10.78). Two unrelated familial SNF cases harbored in trans double NF1 mutations that seemed to have a subclinical worsening effect on the clinical phenotype. Our study, with the largest series of SNF patients reported to date, better defines the clinical and genetic features of SNF, which could improve the management and genetic counseling of NF1.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers; Volume 15; Issue 1; Pages: 59
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c44b02efaf947284d97573ff55a8cdf