Clinical, Morphological, and Molecular Study of Diffuse WHO Grade II and III Astrocytomas: A Retrospective Analysis from a Single Tertiary Care Institute (original) (raw)

Novel, improved grading system(s) for IDH-mutant astrocytic gliomas

Acta neuropathologica, 2018

According to the 2016 World Health Organization Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System (2016 CNS WHO), IDH-mutant astrocytic gliomas comprised WHO grade II diffuse astrocytoma, IDH-mutant (AII), WHO grade III anaplastic astrocytoma, IDH-mutant (AAIII), and WHO grade IV glioblastoma, IDH-mutant (GBM). Notably, IDH gene status has been made the major criterion for classification while the manner of grading has remained unchanged: it is based on histological criteria that arose from studies which antedated knowledge of the importance of IDH status in diffuse astrocytic tumor prognostic assessment. Several studies have now demonstrated that the anticipated differences in survival between the newly defined AII and AAIII have lost their significance. In contrast, GBM still exhibits a significantly worse outcome than its lower grade IDH-mutant counterparts. To address the problem of establishing prognostically significant grading for IDH-mutant astrocytic gliomas in the IDH...

IDH mutant diffuse and anaplastic astrocytomas have similar age at presentation and little difference in survival: a grading problem for WHO

Acta neuropathologica, 2015

The WHO 2007 classification of tumors of the CNS distinguishes between diffuse astrocytoma WHO grade II (A IIWHO2007) and anaplastic astrocytoma WHO grade III (AA III WHO2007). Patients with A II WHO2007 are significantly younger and survive significantly longer than those with AA III WHO2007. So far, classification and grading relies on morphological grounds only and does not yet take into account IDH status, a molecular marker of prognostic relevance. We here demonstrate that WHO 2007 grading performs poorly in predicting prognosis when applied to astrocytoma carrying IDH mutations. Three independent series including a total of 1360 adult diffuse astrocytic gliomas with IDH mutation containing 683 A II IDHmut, 562 AA III IDHmut and 115 GBM IDHmut have been examined for age distribution and survival. In all three series patients with A II IDHmut and AA III IDHmut were of identical age at presentation of disease (36-37 years) and the difference in survival between grades was much le...

No prognostic value of IDH1 mutations in a series of 100 WHO grade II astrocytomas

Journal of Neuro-Oncology, 2012

Mutations in the gene encoding isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) have been identified in approximately 70-80 % of astrocytomas and oligodendrogliomas of WHO grades II and III, and in secondary glioblastomas. In addition, a low incidence of IDH2 mutations has been detected in these tumors, and the occurence of IDH1 and IDH2 mutations is mutually exclusive. For patients with anaplastic gliomas and glioblastomas with IDH1 mutations, overall survival was significantly longer than for patients with wild-type tumours. However, the prognostic value of IDH1 in low-grade gliomas remains ambiguous. IDH1 codon 132 and IDH2 codon 172 mutation status were determined by direct sequencing for a retrospective series of 100 patients with histologically diagnosed Astrocytomas WHO Grad II (A II), and investigated for association with patient outcome. For the patient cohort analysed, median progression-free survival (PFS) was 44.6 months (95 %-CI 1.0-267.0), time to progression (median time to malignant progression (TtMP) was 74.9 months (95 %-CI 1.6-236.2), and median overall survival (OS) was 81.4 months (95 %-CI 5.5-274.8). IDH1 mutations were identified in 79 % of the patients. IDH2 mutations were not observed. Univariate and multivariate analysis revealed no association between IDH1 mutation status and PFS, TtMP, and OS. Furthermore, there were no significant differences regarding PFS, TtMP, and OS between patients with and without IDH1 mutations who did not receive adjuvant treatment. The prognostic value of IDH1 mutations in low-grade astrocytomas is rather low compared with that in high-grade gliomas.

The prognostic impact of subclonal IDH1 mutation in grade 2–4 astrocytomas

Neuro-Oncology Advances

Background Isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) mutations are thought to represent an early oncogenic event in glioma evolution, found with high penetrance across tumor cells; however, in rare cases, IDH mutation may exist only in a small subset of the total tumor cells (subclonal IDH mutation). Methods We present 2 institutional cases with subclonal IDH1 R132H mutation. In addition, 2 large publicly available cohorts of IDH-mutant astrocytomas were mined for cases harboring subclonal IDH mutations (defined as tumor cell fraction with IDH mutation ≤0.67) and the clinical and molecular features of these subclonal cases were compared to clonal IDH-mutant astrocytomas. Results Immunohistochemistry (IHC) performed on 2 institutional World Health Organization grade 4 IDH-mutant astrocytomas revealed only a minority of tumor cells in each case with IDH1 R132H mutant protein, and next-generation sequencing (NGS) revealed remarkably low IDH1 variant allele frequencies compared to other pathogenic...

Adult IDH wild type astrocytomas biologically and clinically resolve into other tumor entities

Acta neuropathologica, 2015

IDH wild type (IDHwt) anaplastic astrocytomas WHO grade III (AA III) are associated with poor outcome. To address the possibilities of molecular subsets among astrocytoma or of diagnostic reclassification, we analyzed a series of 160 adult IDHwt tumors comprising 120 AA III and 40 diffuse astrocytomas WHO grade II (A II) for molecular hallmark alterations and established methylation and copy number profiles. Based on molecular profiles and hallmark alterations the tumors could be grouped into four major sets. 124/160 (78 %) tumors were diagnosed as the molecular equivalent of conventional glioblastoma (GBM), and 15/160 (9 %) as GBM-H3F3A mutated (GBM-H3). 13/160 (8 %) exhibited a distinct methylation profile that was most similar to GBM-H3-K27, however, lacked the H3F3A mutation. This group was enriched for tumors of infratentorial and midline localization and showed a trend towards a more favorable prognosis. All but one of the 120 IDHwt AA III could be assigned to these three grou...

Survival of diffuse astrocytic glioma, IDH1/2 wildtype, with molecular features of glioblastoma, WHO grade IV: a confirmation of the cIMPACT-NOW criteria

Neuro-Oncology, 2019

Background The Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy (cIMPACT-NOW) has recommended that isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 and 2 wildtype (IDH1/2wt) diffuse lower-grade gliomas (LGGs) World Health Organization (WHO) grade II or III that present with (i) a telomerase reverse transcriptase promoter mutation (pTERTmt), and/or (ii) gain of chromosome 7 combined with loss of chromosome 10, and/or (iii) epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification should be reclassified as diffuse astrocytic glioma, IDH1/2 wildtype, with molecular features of glioblastoma, WHO grade IV (IDH1/2wt astrocytomas WHO IV). This paper describes the overall survival (OS) of IDH1/2wt astrocytoma WHO IV patients, and more in detail patients with tumors with pTERTmt only. Methods In this retrospective multicenter study, we compared the OS of 71 IDH1/2wt astrocytomas WHO IV patients, with radiological characteristics of LGGs, with the OS of 197 IDH1/2wt glioblastoma patients. ...

IDH1 Mutations in Diffusely Infiltrating Astrocytomas

American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 2012

IDH1 mutations are frequent genetic alterations in low-grade diffuse gliomas and secondary glioblastoma (GBM). To validate mutation frequency, IDH1 gene at codon 132 was sequenced in 74 diffusely infiltrating astrocytomas: diffuse astrocytoma (DA; World Health Organization [WHO] grade II), anaplastic astrocytoma (AA; WHO grade III), and GBM (WHO grade IV). All cases were immunostained with IDH1-R132H monoclonal antibody. Mutational status was correlated with mutant protein expression, patient age, duration of symptoms, and prognosis of patients with GBM. We detected 31 (41.9%) heterozygous IDH1 mutations resulting in arginine-to-histidine substitution (R132H;CGT-CAT). All 12 DAs (100%), 13 of 14 AAs (92.9%), and 6 of 48 GBMs (12.5%) (5/6 [83.3%] secondary, and 1/42 [2.4%] primary) harbored IDH1 mutations. The correlation between mutational status and protein expression was significant (P <. 001). IDH1 mutation status, though not associated with prognosis of patients with GBM, showed significant association with younger age and longer duration of symptoms in the whole cohort (P < .001). Our study validates IDH1 mutant protein expression across various grades of astrocytoma, and demonstrates a high incidence of IDH1 mutations in DA, AA, and secondary GBM. AA, anaplastic astrocytoma; DA, diffuse astrocytoma; and GA, glioblastoma. * Data are given as number (percentage) unless otherwise indicated. † Fisher exact test. ‡ DA vs AA. § DA vs GBM. • AA vs GBM.

Diffuse Astrocytoma, IDH-Wildtype: A Dissolving Diagnosis

Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology, 2018

The histological and molecular features and even the mere existence of diffuse astrocytoma, IDH-wildtype, remain unclear. We therefore examined 212 diffuse astrocytomas (grade II WHO) in adults using IDH1(R132H) immunohistochemistry followed by IDH1/IDH2 sequencing and neuroimaging review. DNA methylation status and copy number profiles were assessed by Infinium HumanMethylation450k BeadChip. Only 25/212 patients harbored tumors without IDH1/IDH2 hotspot mutations and without contrast enhancement. By DNA methylation profiling, 10/25 tumors were classified as glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype, and an additional 7 cases could not be classified using methylome analysis, but showed genetic characteristics of glioblastoma. Histologically, all of these 17 tumors were low-grade diffuse astrocytomas. Nevertheless, 10/17 patients experienced early malignant progression. Other methylation classes included diffuse midline glioma, H3 K27M-mutant, diffuse astrocytoma, IDH-mutant, pilocytic astrocytoma,...