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Comprehensive, Integrative Genomic Analysis of Diffuse Lower-Grade Gliomas.

Authors :
Brat DJ
Verhaak RG
Aldape KD
Yung WK
Salama SR
Cooper LA
Rheinbay E
Miller CR
Vitucci M
Morozova O
Robertson AG
Noushmehr H
Laird PW
Cherniack AD
Akbani R
Huse JT
Ciriello G
Poisson LM
Barnholtz-Sloan JS
Berger MS
Brennan C
Colen RR
Colman H
Flanders AE
Giannini C
Grifford M
Iavarone A
Jain R
Joseph I
Kim J
Kasaian K
Mikkelsen T
Murray BA
O'Neill BP
Pachter L
Parsons DW
Sougnez C
Sulman EP
Vandenberg SR
Van Meir EG
von Deimling A
Zhang H
Crain D
Lau K
Mallery D
Morris S
Paulauskis J
Penny R
Shelton T
Sherman M
Yena P
Black A
Bowen J
Dicostanzo K
Gastier-Foster J
Leraas KM
Lichtenberg TM
Pierson CR
Ramirez NC
Taylor C
Weaver S
Wise L
Zmuda E
Davidsen T
Demchok JA
Eley G
Ferguson ML
Hutter CM
Mills Shaw KR
Ozenberger BA
Sheth M
Sofia HJ
Tarnuzzer R
Wang Z
Yang L
Zenklusen JC
Ayala B
Baboud J
Chudamani S
Jensen MA
Liu J
Pihl T
Raman R
Wan Y
Wu Y
Ally A
Auman JT
Balasundaram M
Balu S
Baylin SB
Beroukhim R
Bootwalla MS
Bowlby R
Bristow CA
Brooks D
Butterfield Y
Carlsen R
Carter S
Chin L
Chu A
Chuah E
Cibulskis K
Clarke A
Coetzee SG
Dhalla N
Fennell T
Fisher S
Gabriel S
Getz G
Gibbs R
Guin R
Hadjipanayis A
Hayes DN
Hinoue T
Hoadley K
Holt RA
Hoyle AP
Jefferys SR
Jones S
Jones CD
Kucherlapati R
Lai PH
Lander E
Lee S
Lichtenstein L
Ma Y
Maglinte DT
Mahadeshwar HS
Marra MA
Mayo M
Meng S
Meyerson ML
Mieczkowski PA
Moore RA
Mose LE
Mungall AJ
Pantazi A
Parfenov M
Park PJ
Parker JS
Perou CM
Protopopov A
Ren X
Roach J
Sabedot TS
Schein J
Schumacher SE
Seidman JG
Seth S
Shen H
Simons JV
Sipahimalani P
Soloway MG
Song X
Sun H
Tabak B
Tam A
Tan D
Tang J
Thiessen N
Triche T Jr
Van Den Berg DJ
Veluvolu U
Waring S
Weisenberger DJ
Wilkerson MD
Wong T
Wu J
Xi L
Xu AW
Yang L
Zack TI
Zhang J
Aksoy BA
Arachchi H
Benz C
Bernard B
Carlin D
Cho J
DiCara D
Frazer S
Fuller GN
Gao J
Gehlenborg N
Haussler D
Heiman DI
Iype L
Jacobsen A
Ju Z
Katzman S
Kim H
Knijnenburg T
Kreisberg RB
Lawrence MS
Lee W
Leinonen K
Lin P
Ling S
Liu W
Liu Y
Liu Y
Lu Y
Mills G
Ng S
Noble MS
Paull E
Rao A
Reynolds S
Saksena G
Sanborn Z
Sander C
Schultz N
Senbabaoglu Y
Shen R
Shmulevich I
Sinha R
Stuart J
Sumer SO
Sun Y
Tasman N
Taylor BS
Voet D
Weinhold N
Weinstein JN
Yang D
Yoshihara K
Zheng S
Zhang W
Zou L
Abel T
Sadeghi S
Cohen ML
Eschbacher J
Hattab EM
Raghunathan A
Schniederjan MJ
Aziz D
Barnett G
Barrett W
Bigner DD
Boice L
Brewer C
Calatozzolo C
Campos B
Carlotti CG Jr
Chan TA
Cuppini L
Curley E
Cuzzubbo S
Devine K
DiMeco F
Duell R
Elder JB
Fehrenbach A
Finocchiaro G
Friedman W
Fulop J
Gardner J
Hermes B
Herold-Mende C
Jungk C
Kendler A
Lehman NL
Lipp E
Liu O
Mandt R
McGraw M
Mclendon R
McPherson C
Neder L
Nguyen P
Noss A
Nunziata R
Ostrom QT
Palmer C
Perin A
Pollo B
Potapov A
Potapova O
Rathmell WK
Rotin D
Scarpace L
Schilero C
Senecal K
Shimmel K
Shurkhay V
Sifri S
Singh R
Sloan AE
Smolenski K
Staugaitis SM
Steele R
Thorne L
Tirapelli DP
Unterberg A
Vallurupalli M
Wang Y
Warnick R
Williams F
Wolinsky Y
Bell S
Rosenberg M
Stewart C
Huang F
Grimsby JL
Radenbaugh AJ
Zhang J
Source :
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 2015 Jun 25; Vol. 372 (26), pp. 2481-98. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Jun 10.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Diffuse low-grade and intermediate-grade gliomas (which together make up the lower-grade gliomas, World Health Organization grades II and III) have highly variable clinical behavior that is not adequately predicted on the basis of histologic class. Some are indolent; others quickly progress to glioblastoma. The uncertainty is compounded by interobserver variability in histologic diagnosis. Mutations in IDH, TP53, and ATRX and codeletion of chromosome arms 1p and 19q (1p/19q codeletion) have been implicated as clinically relevant markers of lower-grade gliomas.<br />Methods: We performed genomewide analyses of 293 lower-grade gliomas from adults, incorporating exome sequence, DNA copy number, DNA methylation, messenger RNA expression, microRNA expression, and targeted protein expression. These data were integrated and tested for correlation with clinical outcomes.<br />Results: Unsupervised clustering of mutations and data from RNA, DNA-copy-number, and DNA-methylation platforms uncovered concordant classification of three robust, nonoverlapping, prognostically significant subtypes of lower-grade glioma that were captured more accurately by IDH, 1p/19q, and TP53 status than by histologic class. Patients who had lower-grade gliomas with an IDH mutation and 1p/19q codeletion had the most favorable clinical outcomes. Their gliomas harbored mutations in CIC, FUBP1, NOTCH1, and the TERT promoter. Nearly all lower-grade gliomas with IDH mutations and no 1p/19q codeletion had mutations in TP53 (94%) and ATRX inactivation (86%). The large majority of lower-grade gliomas without an IDH mutation had genomic aberrations and clinical behavior strikingly similar to those found in primary glioblastoma.<br />Conclusions: The integration of genomewide data from multiple platforms delineated three molecular classes of lower-grade gliomas that were more concordant with IDH, 1p/19q, and TP53 status than with histologic class. Lower-grade gliomas with an IDH mutation either had 1p/19q codeletion or carried a TP53 mutation. Most lower-grade gliomas without an IDH mutation were molecularly and clinically similar to glioblastoma. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health.).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-4406
Volume :
372
Issue :
26
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26061751
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1402121