Abstract

The detection of IDH mutations in patients with diffusely infiltrating malignant astrocytomas resulted in substantial modifications in the concept of WHO classification of these tumors. An important underlying observation was that patients with anaplastic astrocytomas (AA) without IDH mutation had a clinical course similar to that of patients with glioblastomas (GBM). The underlying observations of the German Glioma Network and NOA-04, however, were based on mixed patient cohorts. While most GBM patients received combined radiochemotherapy, patients with AA usually had radiotherapy or chemotherapy only. This intrinsic shortcoming of the study raised the question of whether patients with AA, IDH wildtype, WHO grade III, might have better prognosis if treated with combined radiochemotherapy than patients with GBM receiving the same combination therapy. Thus, the question remains whether the established histopathological grading criteria for malignant astrocytomas in the absence of an IDH mutation are still important if neither vascular proliferation nor necrosis are detectable. All patients in the cohort investigated here with the diagnosis of AA or GBM were subjected to a combined radiochemotherapy according to the Stupp protocol independently of the histopathological diagnosis. Thus, the analysis of these patients allows to clarify whether patients with AA, IDH wildtype, WHO grade III have a prognosis similar to that of GBM, IDH wildtype, WHO grade IV, even under equivalent therapeutic conditions. We determined the IDH1 and IDH2 status by sequencing, the MGMT status by pyrosequencing after bisulfite treatment and the EGFR status of the patients by FISH. In fact, the patients with the histopathological diagnosis of an AA IDH wild-type under similar aggressive therapy showed a comparable and therefore no better prognosis (median overall survival (mOS) 16 months) than patients with a GBM (mOS 13 months). Instead, patients with an AA and an IDH mutation receiving the same therapy had a mOS of 54 months. Thus, it can be concluded that in the absence of an IDH mutation, the established histopathological grading criteria ‘necrosis’ and ‘vascular proliferation’ actually lose their prognostic significance. If, on the other hand, patients with malignant astrocytomas and an IDH mutation are examined, there is still a difference between patients with necrosis and/or vascular proliferation and those whose tumors do not show such characteristics. Accordingly, in patients with malignant astrocytomas with IDH mutation it can be concluded that a histological differentiation between AA IDH mutated and GBM IDH mutated remains beneficial from a prognostic perspective.

Highlights

  • Infiltrating malignant astrocytomas are differentiated into anaplastic astrocytomas WHO grade III (AA) and glioblastomas WHO grade IV (GBM) due to the negative prognostic significance of the histopathological biomarkers ‘necrosis’ [1] and ‘microvascular proliferation’ [2] in all editions of the WHO classification of brain tumors [3,4,5,6,7]

  • Patients with AA IDH-wt, on the other hand, are recommended to receive radiotherapy alone if their MGMT status is negative, combined radiochemotherapy followed by temozolomide treatment if the MGMT methylation status is positive

  • The IDH status, on the other hand, has no consequences with regard to therapy recommendations for patients with GBM who are to be treated at an age below 70 years according to the Stupp protocol [22]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Infiltrating malignant astrocytomas are differentiated into anaplastic astrocytomas WHO grade III (AA) and glioblastomas WHO grade IV (GBM) due to the negative prognostic significance of the histopathological biomarkers ‘necrosis’ [1] and ‘microvascular proliferation’ [2] in all editions of the WHO classification of brain tumors [3,4,5,6,7]. According to the revised fourth edition of the WHO classification of brain tumors from 2016, malignant astrocytomas are differentiated based on their IDH status into the group of anaplastic astrocytomas WHO grade III with/ without IDH mutation (AA IDH-mut/AA IDH-wt) and into the group of glioblastomas WHO grade IV with/ without IDH mutation (GBM IDH-mut/GBM IDH-wt) [6]. This differentiation of tumors according to IDH status was based on the observation that a positive IDH status correlated with a better prognosis for the patients both within the group of AA [8] and within the group of GBM [9]. GBM IDH-wt carry EGFR amplifications in around 45% [15] and TERT mutations in up to 80% [16] while astrocytomas with an IDH mutation exhibit such alterations in a rather low number [12]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
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