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Title: | Risk-adapted therapy and biological heterogeneity in pineoblastoma: integrated clinico-pathological analysis from the prospective, multi-center SJMB03 and SJYC07 trials | Authors: | Boop, F. A. Merchant, T. E. Robinson, G. W. Northcott, P. A. Gajjar, A. Klimo, P. Kumar, R. Bouffet, E. Gururangan, S. Crawford, J. R. Kellie, S. J. Chintagumpala, M. Fisher, M. J. Bowers, D. C. Hassall, T. Indelicato, D. J. Onar-Thomas, A. Ellison, D. W. Liu, A. P. Y. Gudenas, B. Lin, T. Orr, B. A. |
Issue Date: | 2020 | Source: | 139, (2), 2020, p. 259-271 | Pages: | 259-271 | Journal: | Acta Neuropathologica | Abstract: | Pineoblastoma is a rare embryonal tumor of childhood that is conventionally treated with high-dose craniospinal irradiation (CSI). Multi-dimensional molecular evaluation of pineoblastoma and associated intertumoral heterogeneity is lacking. Herein, we report outcomes and molecular features of children with pineoblastoma from two multi-center, risk-adapted trials (SJMB03 for patients ≥ 3 years; SJYC07 for patients < 3 years) complemented by a non-protocol institutional cohort. The clinical cohort consisted of 58 patients with histologically diagnosed pineoblastoma (SJMB03 = 30, SJYC07 = 12, non-protocol = 16, including 12 managed with SJMB03-like therapy). The SJMB03 protocol comprised risk-adapted CSI (average-risk = 23.4 Gy, high-risk = 36 Gy) with radiation boost to the primary site and adjuvant chemotherapy. The SJYC07 protocol consisted of induction chemotherapy, consolidation with focal radiation (intermediate-risk) or chemotherapy (high-risk), and metronomic maintenance therapy. The molecular cohort comprised 43 pineal parenchymal tumors profiled by DNA methylation array (n = 43), whole-exome sequencing (n = 26), and RNA-sequencing (n = 16). Respective 5-year progression-free survival rates for patients with average-risk or high-risk disease on SJMB03 or SJMB03-like therapy were 100% and 56.5 ± 10.3% (P = 0.007); respective 2-year progression-free survival rates for those with intermediate-risk or high-risk disease on SJYC07 were 14.3 ± 13.2% and 0% (P = 0.375). Of patients with average-risk disease treated with SJMB03/SJMB03-like therapy, 17/18 survived without progression. DNA-methylation analysis revealed four clinically relevant pineoblastoma subgroups: PB-A, PB-B, PB-B–like, and PB-FOXR2. Pineoblastoma subgroups differed in age at diagnosis, propensity for metastasis, cytogenetics, and clinical outcomes. Alterations in the miRNA-processing pathway genes DICER1, DROSHA, and DGCR8 were recurrent and mutually exclusive in PB-B and PB-B–like subgroups; PB-FOXR2 samples universally overexpressed the FOXR2 proto-oncogene. Our findings suggest superior outcome amongst older children with average-risk pineoblastoma treated with reduced-dose CSI. The identification of biologically and clinically distinct pineoblastoma subgroups warrants consideration of future molecularly-driven treatment protocols for this rare pediatric brain tumor entity.L20039549312020-01-06 | DOI: | 10.1007/s00401-019-02106-9 | Resources: | https://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&id=L2003954931&from=exporthttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00401-019-02106-9 | | Keywords: | maintenance chemotherapy;major clinical study;male;metronomic drug administration;multicenter study;multimodality cancer therapy;multiple cycle treatment;newborn;overall survival;phase 3 clinical trial;pineal body tumor;pineoblastoma;priority journal;progression free survival;prospective study;risk assessment;second look surgery;survival rate;whole exome sequencing;RNA sequence;NCT00085202cisplatin;cyclophosphamide;etoposide;mafosfamide;methotrexate;microRNA;topotecan;vinblastine;vincristine;adjuvant chemotherapy;adolescent;adult;article;autologous stem cell transplantation;cancer combination chemotherapy;child;clinical feature;clinical outcome;cohort analysis;consolidation chemotherapy;craniospinal irradiation;dgcr8 gene;dicer1 gene;DNA methylation;drosha gene;drug megadose;female;foxr2 gene;gene;high risk patient;human;induction chemotherapy;infant;intermediate risk patient | Type: | Article |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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