Back to Search Start Over

Genetic and epigenetic stability of oligodendrogliomas at recurrence.

Authors :
Koki Aihara
Akitake Mukasa
Genta Nagae
Masashi Nomura
Shogo Yamamoto
Hiroki Ueda
Kenji Tatsuno
Junji Shibahara
Miwako Takahashi
Toshimitsu Momose
Shota Tanaka
Shunsaku Takayanagi
Shunsuke Yanagisawa
Takahide Nejo
Satoshi Takahashi
Mayu Omata
Ryohei Otani
Kuniaki Saito
Yoshitaka Narita
Motoo Nagane
Source :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications. 3/7/2017, Vol. 5, following p1-11. 14p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Among diffuse gliomas, oligodendrogliomas show relatively better prognosis, respond well to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and seldom progress to very aggressive tumors. To elucidate the genetic and epigenetic background for such behavior and tumor evolution during tumor relapse, we comparatively analyzed 12 pairs of primary and recurrent oligodendrogliomas with 1p/19q-codeletion. Initial treatment for these patients was mostly chemotherapy alone. Temozolomide was used for 3, and procarbazine, nimustine and vincristine (PAV chemotherapy)were used for 7 patients. World Health Organization histological grade at recurrence was mostly stable; it was increased in 2, the same in 9, and decreased in 1 cases. Whole-exome sequencing demonstrated that the rate of shared mutation between the primary and recurrent tumors was relatively low, ranging from 3.2-57.9% (average, 33.3%), indicating a branched evolutionary pattern. The trunk alterations that existed throughout the course were restricted to IDH1 mutation, 1p/19q-codeletion, and TERT promoter mutation, and mutation of the known candidate tumor suppressor genes CIC and FUBP1 were not consistently observed between primary and recurrent tumors. Multiple sampling from different regions within a tumor showed marked intratumoral heterogeneity. Notably, in general, the number of mutations was not significantly different after recurrence, remaining under 100, and no hypermutator phenotype was observed. FUBP1 mutation, loss of chr. 9p21, and TCF12 mutation were among a few recurrent de novo alterations that were found at recurrence, indicating that these events were clonally selected at recurrence but were not enough to enhance malignancy. Genome-wide methylation status, measured by Illumina 450 K arrays, was stable between recurrence and the primary tumor. In summary, although oligodendroglioma displays marked mutational heterogeneity, histological malignant transformation accompanying events such as considerable increase in mutation number and epigenetic profile change were not observed at recurrence, indicating that noticeable temporal and spatial genetic heterogeneity in oligodendrogliomas does not result in rapid tumor progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20515960
Volume :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Neuropathologica Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
121704825
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-017-0422-z