Desmoplastic Infantile Ganglioglioma: A MAPK Pathway-Driven and Microglia/Macrophage-Rich Neuroepithelial Tumor

Author:

Blessing Melissa M1ORCID,Blackburn Patrick R1ORCID,Krishnan Chandra1,Harrod Virginia L1,Barr Fritcher Emily G1,Zysk Christopher D1,Jackson Rory A1,Milosevic Dragana1,Nair Asha A1,Davila Jaime I1,Balcom Jessica R1,Jenkins Robert B1,Halling Kevin C1,Kipp Benjamin R1,Nageswara Rao Amulya A1,Laack Nadia N1,Daniels David J1,Macon William R1,Ida Cristiane M1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Health Sciences Research, Pediatrics, Radiation Oncology, and Neurologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota; and Departments of Pathology and Neuro-Oncology, Dell Children’s Medical Center, Austin, Texas

Abstract

Abstract MAPK pathway activation has been recurrently observed in desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma/astrocytoma (DIG/DIA) with reported disproportionally low mutation allele frequencies relative to the apparent high tumor content, suggesting that MAPK pathway alterations may be subclonal. We sought to expand the number of molecularly profiled cases and investigate if tumor cell composition could account for the observed low mutation allele frequencies. Molecular (targeted neuro-oncology next-generation sequencing/RNA sequencing and OncoScan microarray) and immunohistochemical (CD68-PGM1/CD163/CD14/CD11c/lysozyme/CD3/CD20/CD34/PD-L1) studies were performed in 7 DIG. Activating MAPK pathway alterations were identified in 4 (57%) cases: 3 had a BRAF mutation (V600E/V600D/V600_W604delinsDQTDG, at 8%–27% variant allele frequency) and 1 showed a TPM3-NTRK1 fusion. Copy number changes were infrequent and nonrecurrent. All tumors had at least 30% of cells morphologically and immunophenotypically consistent with microglial/macrophage lineage. Two subtotally resected tumors regrew; 1 was re-excised and received adjuvant treatment (chemotherapy/targeted therapy), with clinical response to targeted therapy only. Even with residual tumor, all patients are alive (median follow-up, 83 months; 19–139). This study further supports DIG as another MAPK pathway-driven neuroepithelial tumor, thus expanding potential treatment options for tumors not amenable to surgical cure, and suggests that DIG is a microglia/macrophage-rich neuroepithelial tumor with frequent low driver mutation allele frequencies.

Funder

Anatomic Pathology Division

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Clinical Neurology,Neurology,General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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