The differential diagnosis of pilocytic astrocytoma with atypical features and malignant glioma: an analysis of 16 cases with emphasis on distinguishing molecular features
Rare pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) have atypical histologic and clinicoradiologic features that raise the differential diagnosis of glioblastoma. Whether ancillary studies can supplement histopathologic examination in placing these cases accurately on the spectrum of WHO Grade I PA to higher-grade gli...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neuro-oncology 2013-12, Vol.115 (3), p.477-486 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rare pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) have atypical histologic and clinicoradiologic features that raise the differential diagnosis of glioblastoma. Whether ancillary studies can supplement histopathologic examination in placing these cases accurately on the spectrum of WHO Grade I PA to higher-grade glioma is not always clear, partly because these cases are not common. Here, ten PAs with atypical clinicoradiologic and histologic features and six pediatric glioblastoma multiforme (pGBMs) were analyzed for
BRAF
V600E,
IDH1
,
IDH2
, and
TP53
mutations. Ki-67, p53, and p16 protein expression were also examined by immunohistochemistry.
BRAF–KIAA1549
fusion status was assessed in the PA subgroup. The rate of
BRAF
–
KIAA1549
fusion was high in these PAs (5/7 tumors) including four extracerebellar examples. A single
BRAF
V600E mutation was identified in the fusion-negative extracerebellar PA of a very young child who succumbed to the disease.
TP53
mutations were present only in malignant gliomas, including three pGBMs and one case designated as PA with anaplastic features (with consultation opinion of pGBM).
IDH1
and
IDH2
were wild type in all cases, consistent with earlier findings that
IDH
mutations are not typical in high-grade gliomas of patients ≤14 years of age. Immunohistochemical studies showed substantial overlap in Ki-67 labeling indices, an imperfect correlation between p53 labeling and
TP53
mutation status, and complete p16 loss in only two pGBMs but in no PAs. These results suggest that (a)
BRAF
–
KIAA1549
fusion may be common in PAs with atypical clinicoradiologic and histologic features, including those at extracerebellar sites, (b)
BRAF
V600E mutation is uncommon in extracerebellar PAs, and (c)
TP53
mutation analysis remains a valuable tool in identifying childhood gliomas that will likely behave in a malignant fashion. |
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ISSN: | 0167-594X 1573-7373 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11060-013-1249-5 |