Abstract
The World Health Organization currently classifies medulloblastoma (MB) into four molecular groups (WNT, SHH, Group 3 and Group 4) and four histologic subtypes (classic, desmoplastic nodular, MB with extensive nodularity, and large cell/anaplastic). "Classic" MB is the most frequent histology, but unfortunately it does not predict molecular group or patient outcome. While MB may exhibit additional histologic features outside of the traditional WHO subtypes, the clinical significance of such features, in a molecular context, is unclear. The clinicopathologic features of 120 pediatric MB were reviewed in the context of NanoString molecular grouping. Each case was evaluated for five ancillary histologic features, including: nodularity without desmoplasia (i.e., "biphasic", B-MB), rhythmic palisades, and focal anaplasia. Molecular and histological features were statistically correlated to clinical outcome using Chi-square, log-rank, and multivariate Cox regression analysis. While B-MB (N = 32) and rhythmic palisades (N = 12) were enriched amongst non-WNT/SHH MB (especially Group 4), they were not statistically associated with outcome. In contrast, focal anaplasia (N = 12) was not associated with any molecular group, but did predict unfavorable outcome. These data nominate B-MB as a surrogate marker of Groups 3 and particularly 4 MB, which may earmark a clinically significant subset of cases.
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