The intra-tumoral heterogeneity in glioblastoma — a limitation for prognostic value of epigenetic markers?
Objective Epigenetic tumor features are getting into focus as prognostic markers in glioblastoma. Whether intra-tumoral heterogeneity in these epigenetic characteristics may influence prognostic value remains unclear. Methods Of 154 patients suffering from glioblastoma, 120 patients served as refere...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Acta neurochirurgica 2023-06, Vol.165 (6), p.1635-1644 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective
Epigenetic tumor features are getting into focus as prognostic markers in glioblastoma. Whether intra-tumoral heterogeneity in these epigenetic characteristics may influence prognostic value remains unclear.
Methods
Of 154 patients suffering from glioblastoma, 120 patients served as reference collective, while 34 patients were compiled as test collective.
MGMT
,
p15
, and
p16
promoter methylation and miRNA expression levels (miRNA-21, miRNA-24, miRNA-26a, and miRNA-181d) were measured in each tumor specimen. Serving as a statistical baseline, epigenetic heterogeneity between tumors (inter-tumoral) was estimated within a triplet of three tumor specimens from three different reference patients. For estimation of epigenetic heterogeneity within a tumor (intra-tumoral), previous results were compared to three tumor specimens within one glioblastoma of patients of the test collective. Resulting levels of heterogeneity were then correlated with survival and validated by an external TCGA data set.
Results
Heterogeneity in
MGMT
promoter methylation occurred less likely in the test group compared to the reference group. No difference in heterogeneity was observed between test and reference group regarding
p15
and
p16
methylation. Intra-tumoral heterogeneity within the test group regarding miRNA-21, miRNA-24, miRNA-26a, and miRNA-181d expression was not distinguishable from inter-tumoral heterogeneity. A homogenously increased miRNA-21 expression was associated with reduced overall survival in the test collective. The findings could be validated by comparison with TCGA datasets.
Conclusion
Heterogeneity of epigenetic characteristics in one glioblastoma may be of the same magnitude as heterogeneity between different patients. Not only the extent of epigenetic characteristics but also the extent of intra-tumoral heterogeneity may influence survival in glioblastoma. |
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ISSN: | 0942-0940 0001-6268 0942-0940 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00701-023-05594-7 |