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Somatic POLE mutations cause an ultramutated giant cell high-grade glioma subtype with better prognosis

Authors :
Ketu Mishra-Gorur
S. Bulent Omay
Kaya Bilguvar
Alexander O. Vortmeyer
Akdes Serin Harmanci
Süleyman Coşkun
Jia Sun
Tanyeri Barak
Mehmet Bakırcıoğlu
Ahmet Okay Caglayan
Victoria E. Clark
Koray Özduman
Jie Li
M. Necmettin Pamir
Nikolaus Schultz
Anita Huttner
Nils Weinhold
Jennifer Moliterno Günel
Murat Gunel
Doğan Köse
Chris Sander
Katsuhito Yasuno
Yavuz Köksal
Burçin Baran
Jacob F Baranoski
E. Zeynep Erson-Omay
Caner Çağlar
Geneive Carrión-Grant
Acibadem University Dspace
ÇAĞLAR, CANER
Selçuk Üniversitesi
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

WOS: 000364783100007<br />PubMed: 25740784<br />Background. Malignant high-grade gliomas (HGGs), including the most aggressive form, glioblastoma multiforme, show significant clinical and genomic heterogeneity. Despite recent advances, the overall survival of HGGs and their response to treatment remain poor. In order to gain further insight into disease pathophysiology by correlating genomic landscape with clinical behavior, thereby identifying distinct HGG molecular subgroups associated with improved prognosis, we performed a comprehensive genomic analysis. Methods. We analyzed and compared 720 exome-sequenced gliomas (136 from Yale, 584 from The Cancer Genome Atlas) based on their genomic, histological, and clinical features. Results. We identified a subgroup of HGGs (6 total, 4 adults and 2 children) that harbored a statistically significantly increased number of somatic mutations (mean = 9257.3 vs 76.2, P = .002). All of these "ultramutated" tumors harbored somatic mutations in the exonuclease domain of the polymerase epsilon gene (POLE), displaying a distinctive genetic profile, characterized by genomic stability and increased C-to-A transversions. Histologically, they all harbored multinucleated giant or bizarre cells, some with predominant infiltrating immune cells. One adult and both pediatric patients carried homozygous germline mutations in the mutS homolog 6 (MSH6) gene. In adults, POLE mutations were observed in patients younger than 40 years and were associated with a longer progression-free survival. Conclusions. We identified a genomically, histologically, and clinically distinct subgroup of HGGs that harbored somatic POLE mutations and carried an improved prognosis. Identification of distinctive molecular and pathological HGG phenotypes has implications not only for improved classification but also for potential targeted treatments.<br />Gregory M. Kiez and Mehmet Kutman Foundation<br />This study was supported by the Gregory M. Kiez and Mehmet Kutman Foundation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25740784
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d90624c511df9741dd5e005f8378622