Abstract

BACKGROUNDPatients with metastatic pediatric ependymoma have limited therapeutic options and poor outcomes. Approximately ¾ of supratentorial ependymomas are driven by C11ORF95-RELA fusions, and the remaining by a heterogeneous group of fusion events. We present a six year-old male diagnosed with supratentorial ependymoma with leptomeningeal carcinomatosis harboring an NTRK2-fusion. Local and distant multifocal, intracranial and intraspinal tumor recurrence occurred seven months following gross total resection of the primary lesion and proton beam craniospinal irradiation.METHODSDNA and RNA from FFPE tumor were used for targeted sequencing using an 81-gene fusion panel and 124-gene mutation panel. Separately, capture transcriptome sequencing, exome sequencing, and copy number array were performed as part of the Texas KidsCanSeq study, an NHGRI/NCI-funded Clinical Sequencing Evidence-Generating Research (CSER) consortium project. All sequencing was carried out in CLIA-certified laboratories.RESULTSAn in-frame fusion between 5’ exons 1–3 of KANK1 and 3’ exons 16–21 of NTRK2, predicted to retain the kinase domain, was identified. At tumor recurrence, therapy was initiated with Larotrectinib, an FDA-approved pan-TRK inhibitor. Clinical improvement in cognitive speed, motor strength, and coordination was observed at two weeks with significant tumor response on MRI at two and four months.CONCLUSIONTRK gene fusions have not previously been reported in ependymoma. Further tumor characterization by methylation profiling is underway and will be of diagnostic interest given the apparent discordance between tumor histology and molecular findings. This case highlights the potential impact of clinical genomic analysis for children with CNS tumors.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call