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13-02-2024 | Glioblastoma | Research

Imaging predictors of 4q12 amplified and RB1 mutated glioblastoma IDH-wildtype

Authors: Antonio Dono, Jose Torres, Luis Nunez, Octavio Arevalo, Juan Carlos Rodriguez-Quinteros, Roy F. Riascos, Arash Kamali, Nitin Tandon, Leomar Y. Ballester, Yoshua Esquenazi

Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Introduction

Recent studies have identified that glioblastoma IDH-wildtype consists of different molecular subgroups with distinct prognoses. In order to accurately describe and classify gliomas, the Visually AcceSAble Rembrandt Images (VASARI) system was developed. The goal of this study was to evaluate the VASARI characteristics in molecular subgroups of IDH-wildtype glioblastoma.

Methods

A retrospective analysis of glioblastoma IDH- wildtype with comprehensive next-generation sequencing and pre-operative and post-operative MRI was performed. VASARI characteristics and 205 genes were evaluated. Multiple comparison adjustment by the Bejamin-Hochberg false discovery rate (BH-FDR) was performed. A 1:3 propensity score match (PSM) with a Caliper of 0.2 was done.

Results

178 patients with GBM IDH-WT met the inclusion criteria. 4q12 amplified patients (n = 20) were associated with cyst presence (30% vs. 12%, p = 0.042), decreased hemorrhage (35% vs. 62%, p = 0.028), and non-restricting/mixed (35%/60%) rather than restricting diffusion pattern (5%), meanwhile, 4q12 non-amplified patients had mostly restricting (47.4%) rather than a non-restricting/mixed diffusion pattern (28.4%/23.4%). This remained statistically significant after BH-FDR adjustment (p = 0.002). PSM by 4q12 amplification showed that diffusion characteristics continued to be significantly different. Among RB1-mutant patients, 96% had well-defined enhancing margins vs. 70.6% of RB1-WT (p = 0.018), however, this was not significant after BH-FDR or PSM.

Conclusions

Patients with glioblastoma IDH-wildtype harboring 4q12 amplification rarely have restricting DWI patterns compared to their wildtype counterparts, in which this DWI pattern is present in ~ 50% of patients. This suggests that some phenotypic imaging characteristics can be identified among molecular subtypes of IDH-wildtype glioblastoma.
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Literature
Metadata
Title
Imaging predictors of 4q12 amplified and RB1 mutated glioblastoma IDH-wildtype
Authors
Antonio Dono
Jose Torres
Luis Nunez
Octavio Arevalo
Juan Carlos Rodriguez-Quinteros
Roy F. Riascos
Arash Kamali
Nitin Tandon
Leomar Y. Ballester
Yoshua Esquenazi
Publication date
13-02-2024
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Neuro-Oncology / Issue 1/2024
Print ISSN: 0167-594X
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-024-04575-9

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