19p loss is significantly enriched in older age neuroblastoma patients and correlates with poor prognosis

Author:

Lasorsa Vito AlessandroORCID,Cimmino Flora,Ognibene MarziaORCID,Mazzocco Katia,Erminio Giovanni,Morini Martina,Conte Massimo,Iolascon Achille,Pezzolo AnnalisaORCID,Capasso Mario

Abstract

AbstractGenomic aberrations of neuroblastoma occurring in late childhood and adolescence are still understudied. Publicly available DNA copy number profiles of 556 tumors (discovery set) and of 208 tumors obtained by array-CGH assay (validation set) were used to test if 19p loss is significantly over-represented in children and adolescents with neuroblastoma. The 19p loss occurrence was separately tested within different age groups in the discovery and validation set and the resulting P values were combined by meta-analysis and corrected by Bonferroni’s method. In both sets, 19p loss was associated with older age at diagnosis. Particularly, the lowest age group significantly associated with 19p loss (discovery set: 20%; validation set: 35%) was 6 years. The 19p loss correlated with inferior overall survival in patients over 6 years of age. Relevant tumor suppressor genes (KEAP1, DNM2, SMARCA4, SLC44A2 and CDKN2D) and microRNAs (miR-181c, miR-27a, and mirR-199a-1) are located in the genomic region involved in 19p loss. Downregulation of DNM2, SLC44A2 and CDKN2D was associated with poor patient outcome and older age. Among the recurrent NB chromosomal aberrations, only 1q gain was enriched in patients older than 6, and its presence was mutually exclusive with respect to 19p loss. Our data demonstrate that 19p loss is a genomic biomarker of NB diagnosed in older children that can predict clinical outcome.

Funder

Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro

Ministero della Salute

Fondazione Italiana per la Lotta al Neuroblastoma

Regione Campania

Associazione Oncologia Pediatrica e Neuroblastoma

Fondazione Umberto Veronesi

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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