Risk factors for glioblastoma are shared by other brain tumor types

Author:

Smith Carr J.1ORCID,Perfetti Thomas A.2,Chokshi Chirayu34,Venugopal Chitra345,Ashford J. Wesson6,Singh Sheila K.345

Affiliation:

1. Society for Brain Mapping and Therapeutics, Mobile, AL, USA

2. Perfetti & Perfetti, LLC, Winston-Salem, NC, USA

3. Department of Surgery, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

4. Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

5. Center for Discovery in Cancer Research (CDCR), McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

6. Stanford University and VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA

Abstract

The reported risk factors for glioblastoma (GBM), i.e., ionizing radiation, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, Neurofibromatosis I, and Turcot syndrome, also increase the risk of other brain tumor types. Risk factors for human GBM are associated with different oncogenic mutation profiles. Pedigreed domestic dogs with a shorter nose and flatter face (brachycephalic dogs) display relatively high rates of glioma formation. The genetic profiles of canine gliomas are also idiosyncratic. The association of putatively different mutational patterns in humans and canines with GBM suggests that different oncogenic pathways can result in GBM formation. Strong epidemiological evidence for an association between exposure to chemical carcinogens and an increased risk for development of GBM is currently lacking. Ionizing radiation induces point mutations, frameshift mutations, double-strand breaks, and chromosomal insertions or deletions. Mutational profiles associated with chemical exposures overlap with the broad mutational patterns seen with ionizing radiation. Weak statistical associations between chemical exposures and GBM reported in epidemiology studies are biologically plausible. Molecular approaches comparing reproducible patterns seen in spontaneous GBM with analogous patterns found in GBMs resected from patients with known significant exposures to potentially carcinogenic chemicals can address difficulties presented by traditional exposure assessment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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