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Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology 3/2023

14-09-2023 | Thrombosis | Research

Intratumoral thrombosis as a histological biomarker for predicting epidermal growth factor receptor alteration and poor prognosis in patients with glioblastomas

Authors: Takuya Furuta, Tetsuya Negoto, Hiroaki Miyoshi, Mayuko Moritsubo, Hideo Nakamura, Motohiro Morioka, Jun Akiba, Koichi Ohshima, Yasuo Sugita

Published in: Journal of Neuro-Oncology | Issue 3/2023

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Abstract

Purpose

Intratumoral thrombosis is a specific finding in glioblastomas and considered the origin of palisading necrosis. Its distribution and contribution to the glioblastoma pathophysiology and systemic thrombosis are obscure, although deep vein thrombosis is a common complication in glioblastoma cases.

Methods

Clinicopathological and genetic analyses were performed on 97 glioblastoma tissue specimens to elucidate the role of thrombotic events and associated molecular abnormalities.

Results

Morphologically, intratumoral thrombosis was observed more frequently in vessels composed of single-layered CD34-positive endothelium and/or αSMA-positive pericytes in the tumor periphery, compared to microvascular proliferation with multi-channeled and pericyte-proliferating vessels in the tumor center. Intratumoral thrombosis was significantly correlated with the female sex, high preoperative D-dimer levels, and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification. The presence of one or more thrombi in 20 high-power fields was a predictive marker of EGFR amplification, with a sensitivity of 81.5% and specificity of 52.6%. RNA sequencing demonstrated that the group with many thrombi had higher EGFR gene expression levels than the group with few thrombi. The tumor cells invading along the vessels in the tumor periphery were positive for wild-type EGFR but negative for EGFRvIII, whereas the cells around the microvascular proliferation (MVP) in the tumor center were positive for both wild-type EGFR and EGFRvIII. Intratumoral thrombosis is an independent poor prognostic factor.

Conclusions

Aberrant but exquisitely regulated EGFR can induce thrombosis in non-MVP vessels in the tumor invasion area and then promote palisading necrosis, followed by hypoxia, abnormal angiogenesis, and further tumor cell invasion.
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Metadata
Title
Intratumoral thrombosis as a histological biomarker for predicting epidermal growth factor receptor alteration and poor prognosis in patients with glioblastomas
Authors
Takuya Furuta
Tetsuya Negoto
Hiroaki Miyoshi
Mayuko Moritsubo
Hideo Nakamura
Motohiro Morioka
Jun Akiba
Koichi Ohshima
Yasuo Sugita
Publication date
14-09-2023
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Neuro-Oncology / Issue 3/2023
Print ISSN: 0167-594X
Electronic ISSN: 1573-7373
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-023-04447-8

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