Abstract Ependymoma (EPN) posterior fossa group A (PFA) has the highest rate of recurrence and the worst prognosis of all EPN types. At relapse, it is typically incurable even with re-resection and re-irradiation. The biology of recurrent PFA EPN remains largely unknown, which hinders clinical advances. In this longitudinal large multicenter study, we examined matched samples of primary and recurrent disease from PFA EPN patients (n=95) to investigate the biology of recurrence. DNA methylomic data was used to measure copy number variants (CNVs), revealing progressive large scale chromosome gains and losses in successive recurrences. These CNV changes were dominated by chromosome 1q gain and/or 6q loss (1q+/6q-), both previously identified as high-risk factors in PFA EPN, which were present in ~20% at presentation but increased to ~60% at 1st recurrence. Because 6q testing is not routinely performed, this very high incidence at recurrence has not been previously reported. Evolution of chromosomal aberrations was further explored using CNV analysis of single-nuclei RNAseq on approximately 46,000 PFA EPN cells from 6 matched pairs of primary and 1st relapse tumors that harbored CNV changes at recurrence. No evidence of rare subclones in primary tumors was observed, suggesting that chromosomal rearrangement events occur after initial presentation. Cellular and molecular characteristics associated with CNVs were examined by single-nuclei RNAseq, bulk transcriptomic analysis and immunohistochemistry, revealing that 1q+/6q- PFA have a significantly higher mitotic index, increased proportions of proliferative epithelial progenitors and decreased differentiated neoplastic subpopulations. Multivariate survival analyses showed that cases with 1q gain or 6q loss at 1st recurrence were significantly more likely to recur than cases with no 1q or 6q change. The high prevalence of 1q+/6q- at recurrence and the associated shortened survival, suggest that both these abnormalities should be routinely tested for, and used for trial stratification.
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