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Published in: Acta Neuropathologica 2/2020

01-02-2020 | Brain Tumor | Original Paper

Pineoblastoma segregates into molecular sub-groups with distinct clinico-pathologic features: a Rare Brain Tumor Consortium registry study

Authors: Bryan K. Li, Alexandre Vasiljevic, Christelle Dufour, Fupan Yao, Ben L. B. Ho, Mei Lu, Eugene I. Hwang, Sridharan Gururangan, Jordan R. Hansford, Maryam Fouladi, Sumihito Nobusawa, Annie Laquerriere, Marie-Bernadette Delisle, Jason Fangusaro, Fabien Forest, Helen Toledano, Palma Solano-Paez, Sarah Leary, Diane Birks, Lindsey M. Hoffman, Alexandru Szathmari, Cécile Faure-Conter, Xing Fan, Daniel Catchpoole, Li Zhou, Kris Ann P. Schultz, Koichi Ichimura, Guillaume Gauchotte, Nada Jabado, Chris Jones, Delphine Loussouarn, Karima Mokhtari, Audrey Rousseau, David S. Ziegler, Shinya Tanaka, Scott L. Pomeroy, Amar Gajjar, Vijay Ramaswamy, Cynthia Hawkins, Richard G. Grundy, D. Ashley Hill, Eric Bouffet, Annie Huang, Anne Jouvet

Published in: Acta Neuropathologica | Issue 2/2020

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Abstract

Pineoblastomas (PBs) are rare, aggressive pediatric brain tumors of the pineal gland with modest overall survival despite intensive therapy. We sought to define the clinical and molecular spectra of PB to inform new treatment approaches for this orphan cancer. Tumor, blood, and clinical data from 91 patients with PB or supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor (sPNETs/CNS-PNETs), and 2 pineal parenchymal tumors of intermediate differentiation (PPTIDs) were collected from 29 centres in the Rare Brain Tumor Consortium. We used global DNA methylation profiling to define a core group of PB from 72/93 cases, which were delineated into five molecular sub-groups. Copy number, whole exome and targeted sequencing, and miRNA expression analyses were used to evaluate the clinico-pathologic significance of each sub-group. Tumors designated as group 1 and 2 almost exclusively exhibited deleterious homozygous loss-of-function alterations in miRNA biogenesis genes (DICER1, DROSHA, and DGCR8) in 62 and 100% of group 1 and 2 tumors, respectively. Recurrent alterations of the oncogenic MYC-miR-17/92-RB1 pathway were observed in the RB and MYC sub-group, respectively, characterized by RB1 loss with gain of miR-17/92, and recurrent gain or amplification of MYC. PB sub-groups exhibited distinct clinical features: group 1–3 arose in older children (median ages 5.2–14.0 years) and had intermediate to excellent survival (5-year OS of 68.0–100%), while Group RB and MYC PB patients were much younger (median age 1.3–1.4 years) with dismal survival (5-year OS 37.5% and 28.6%, respectively). We identified age < 3 years at diagnosis, metastatic disease, omission of upfront radiation, and chr 16q loss as significant negative prognostic factors across all PBs. Our findings demonstrate that PB exhibits substantial molecular heterogeneity with sub-group-associated clinical phenotypes and survival. In addition to revealing novel biology and therapeutics, molecular sub-grouping of PB can be exploited to reduce treatment intensity for patients with favorable biology tumors.
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Metadata
Title
Pineoblastoma segregates into molecular sub-groups with distinct clinico-pathologic features: a Rare Brain Tumor Consortium registry study
Authors
Bryan K. Li
Alexandre Vasiljevic
Christelle Dufour
Fupan Yao
Ben L. B. Ho
Mei Lu
Eugene I. Hwang
Sridharan Gururangan
Jordan R. Hansford
Maryam Fouladi
Sumihito Nobusawa
Annie Laquerriere
Marie-Bernadette Delisle
Jason Fangusaro
Fabien Forest
Helen Toledano
Palma Solano-Paez
Sarah Leary
Diane Birks
Lindsey M. Hoffman
Alexandru Szathmari
Cécile Faure-Conter
Xing Fan
Daniel Catchpoole
Li Zhou
Kris Ann P. Schultz
Koichi Ichimura
Guillaume Gauchotte
Nada Jabado
Chris Jones
Delphine Loussouarn
Karima Mokhtari
Audrey Rousseau
David S. Ziegler
Shinya Tanaka
Scott L. Pomeroy
Amar Gajjar
Vijay Ramaswamy
Cynthia Hawkins
Richard G. Grundy
D. Ashley Hill
Eric Bouffet
Annie Huang
Anne Jouvet
Publication date
01-02-2020
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Keyword
Brain Tumor
Published in
Acta Neuropathologica / Issue 2/2020
Print ISSN: 0001-6322
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0533
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-019-02111-y

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