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Spatial genomic heterogeneity in diffuse intrinsic pontine and midline high-grade glioma: implications for diagnostic biopsy and targeted therapeutics

Authors :
Maryam Fouladi
Ralph Salloum
Cynthia Hawkins
Michael Brudno
Scott Ryall
Bruce J. Aronow
David P. Witte
James L. Leach
Lili Miles
Phillip J. Dexheimer
Lindsey M. Hoffman
Arun K. Ramani
Shiva Senthil Kumar
Blaise V. Jones
Trent R. Hummel
Q. Richard Lu
Charles B. Stevenson
Pawel Buczkowicz
Mariko DeWire
Lionel M.L. Chow
Rachid Drissi
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

Introduction Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) and midline high-grade glioma (mHGG) are lethal childhood brain tumors. Spatial genomic heterogeneity has been well-described in adult HGG but has not been comprehensively characterized in pediatric HGG. We performed whole exome sequencing on 38-matched primary, contiguous, and metastatic tumor sites from eight children with DIPG (n = 7) or mHGG (n = 1) collected using a unique MRI-guided autopsy protocol. Validation was performed using Sanger sequencing, Droplet Digital polymerase-chain reaction, immunohistochemistry, and fluorescent in-situ hybridization. Results Median age at diagnosis was 6.1 years (range: 2.9–23.3 years). Median overall survival was 13.2 months (range: 11.2–32.2 months). Contiguous tumor infiltration and distant metastases were observed in seven and six patients, respectively, including leptomeningeal dissemination in three DIPGs. Histopathological heterogeneity was evident in seven patients, including intra-pontine heterogeneity in two DIPGs, ranging from World Health Organization grade II to IV astrocytoma. We found conservation of heterozygous K27M mutations in H3F3A (n = 4) or HIST1H3B (n = 3) across all primary, contiguous, and metastatic tumor sites in all DIPGs. ACVR1 (n = 2), PIK3CA (n = 2), FGFR1 (n = 2), and MET (n = 1) were also intra-tumorally conserved. ACVR1 was co-mutated with HIST1H3B (n = 2). In contrast, PDGFRA amplification and mutation were spatially heterogeneous, as were mutations in BCOR (n = 1), ATRX (n = 2), and MYC (n = 1). TP53 aberrations (n = 3 patients) varied by type and location between primary and metastatic tumors sites but were intra-tumorally conserved. Conclusion Spatial conservation of prognostically-relevant and therapeutically-targetable somatic mutations in DIPG and mHGG contrasts the significant heterogeneity of driver mutations seen in adult HGG and supports uniform implementation of diagnostic biopsy in DIPG and mHGG to classify molecular risk groups and guide therapeutic strategy. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40478-015-0269-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20515960
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....321e3148da73596cf1838ce637d467ee
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-015-0269-0