Abstract

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs) are aggressive neoplasms representing approximately 20% of brain tumors in children. Current therapies offer limited disease control, and patients have a poor prognosis. Empiric use of targeted therapy, especially at progression, is increasingly practiced despite a paucity of data regarding temporal and therapy-driven genomic evolution in pHGGs. To study the genetic landscape of pHGGs at recurrence, we performed whole exome and methylation analyses on matched primary and recurrent pHGGs from 16 patients. Tumor mutational profiles identified three distinct subgroups. Group 1 (n = 7) harbored known hotspot mutations in Histone 3 (H3) (K27M or G34V) or IDH1 (H3/IDH1 mutants) and co-occurring TP53 or ACVR1 mutations in tumor pairs across the disease course. Group 2 (n = 7), H3/IDH1 wildtype tumor pairs, harbored novel mutations in chromatin modifiers (ZMYND11, EP300 n = 2), all associated with TP53 alterations, or had BRAF V600E mutations (n = 2) conserved across tumor pairs. Group 3 included 2 tumors with NF1 germline mutations. Pairs from primary and relapsed pHGG samples clustered within the same DNA methylation subgroup. ATRX mutations were clonal and retained in H3G34V and H3/IDH1 wildtype tumors, while different genetic alterations in this gene were observed at diagnosis and recurrence in IDH1 mutant tumors. Mutations in putative drug targets (EGFR, ERBB2, PDGFRA, PI3K) were not always shared between primary and recurrence samples, indicating evolution during progression. Our findings indicate that specific key driver mutations in pHGGs are conserved at recurrence and are prime targets for therapeutic development and clinical trials (e.g. H3 post-translational modifications, IDH1, BRAF V600E). Other actionable mutations are acquired or lost, indicating that re-biopsy at recurrence will provide better guidance for effective targeted therapy of pHGGs.

Highlights

  • Genetic and epigenetic molecular profiling techniques have revolutionized our understanding of the etiology and biology of pediatric high-grade gliomas

  • We have previously shown that disease-defining somatic mutations in oncohistones [K27M in Histone 3 (H3) variants (H3F3A, HIST1H3B)] are spatially stable in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), and co-occur with highly conserved partners throughout geographically distinct tumor sites [18, 30]

  • Copy number variations (CNVs) were analyzed in 8 pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs) tumor-normal pairs using an in-house program (CNAXX; unpublished) we developed that takes both coverage and the deviation of B allele frequency from 50% into account

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic and epigenetic molecular profiling techniques have revolutionized our understanding of the etiology and biology of pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs) (reviewed in [20]). This has not yet led to an improvement in outcome for children with this disease [40] despite the use of agents that target pathways identified through these biological advances. Morrissy et al, have recently demonstrated poor overlap in genetic events between primary and post-treatment medulloblastoma both in murine models and human samples [28] This included a marked divergence in actionable genes between diagnosis and recurrence, despite conservation of molecular subgroup affiliation [28, 36, 47]. We characterize the temporal genomic heterogeneity in pHGGs by assessing the mutational profile and methylome of paired primary and recurrent tumors with emphasis on supratentorial pHGGs

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