Primary mismatch repair deficient IDH-mutant astrocytoma (PMMRDIA) is a distinct type with a poor prognosis
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Published:2020-11-20
Issue:1
Volume:141
Page:85-100
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ISSN:0001-6322
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Container-title:Acta Neuropathologica
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Acta Neuropathol
Author:
Suwala Abigail K., Stichel Damian, Schrimpf Daniel, Kloor Matthias, Wefers Annika K., Reinhardt Annekathrin, Maas Sybren L. N., Kratz Christian P., Schweizer Leonille, Hasselblatt Martin, Snuderl Matija, Abedalthagafi Malak Sameer J., Abdullaev Zied, Monoranu Camelia M., Bergmann Markus, Pekrun Arnulf, Freyschlag Christian, Aronica Eleonora, Kramm Christof M., Hinz Felix, Sievers Philipp, Korshunov Andrey, Kool Marcel, Pfister Stefan M., Sturm Dominik, Jones David T. W., Wick Wolfgang, Unterberg Andreas, Hartmann Christian, Dodgshun Andrew, Tabori Uri, Wesseling Pieter, Sahm Felix, von Deimling Andreas, Reuss David E.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractDiffuse IDH-mutant astrocytoma mostly occurs in adults and carries a favorable prognosis compared to IDH-wildtype malignant gliomas. Acquired mismatch repair deficiency is known to occur in recurrent IDH-mutant gliomas as resistance mechanism towards alkylating chemotherapy. In this multi-institutional study, we report a novel epigenetic group of 32 IDH-mutant gliomas with proven or suspected hereditary mismatch repair deficiency. None of the tumors exhibited a combined 1p/19q deletion. These primary mismatch repair-deficient IDH-mutant astrocytomas (PMMRDIA) were histologically high-grade and were mainly found in children, adolescents and young adults (median age 14 years). Mismatch repair deficiency syndromes (Lynch or Constitutional Mismatch Repair Deficiency Syndrom (CMMRD)) were clinically diagnosed and/or germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes (MLH1, MSH6, MSH2) were found in all cases, except one case with a family and personal history of colon cancer and another case with MSH6-deficiency available only as recurrent tumor. Loss of at least one of the mismatch repair proteins was detected via immunohistochemistry in all, but one case analyzed. Tumors displayed a hypermutant genotype and microsatellite instability was present in more than half of the sequenced cases. Integrated somatic mutational and chromosomal copy number analyses showed frequent inactivation of TP53, RB1 and activation of RTK/PI3K/AKT pathways. In contrast to the majority of IDH-mutant gliomas, more than 60% of the samples in our cohort presented with an unmethylated MGMT promoter. While the rate of immuno-histochemical ATRX loss was reduced, variants of unknown significance were more frequently detected possibly indicating a higher frequency of ATRX inactivation by protein malfunction. Compared to reference cohorts of other IDH-mutant gliomas, primary mismatch repair-deficient IDH-mutant astrocytomas have by far the worst clinical outcome with a median survival of only 15 months irrespective of histological or molecular features. The findings reveal a so far unknown entity of IDH-mutant astrocytoma with high prognostic relevance. Diagnosis can be established by aligning with the characteristic DNA methylation profile, by DNA-sequencing-based proof of mismatch repair deficiency or immunohistochemically demonstrating loss-of-mismatch repair proteins.
Funder
Deutsche Krebshilfe Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Pathology and Forensic Medicine
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