Characteristics of diffuse hemispheric gliomas, H3 G34-mutant in adults
Résumé
Background: Diffuse hemispheric gliomas, H3 G34-mutant (DHG H3G34-mutant) constitute a distinct type of aggressive brain tumors. Although initially described in children, they can also affect adults. The aims were to describe the characteristics of DHG H3G34-mutant in adults and to compare them to those of established types of adult WHO grade IV gliomas.
Methods: The characteristics of 17 adult DHG H3G34-mutant, 32 H3.3 K27M-mutant diffuse midline gliomas (DMG), 100 IDH-wildtype and 36 IDH-mutant glioblastomas were retrospectively analyzed.
Results: Median age at diagnosis in adult DHG H3G34-mutant was 25 years (range: 19-33). All tumors were hemispheric. For 9 patients (56%), absent or faint contrast enhancement initially suggested another diagnosis than a high-grade glioma, and diffusion-weighted imaging seemed retrospectively more helpful to suspect an aggressive tumor than MR-spectroscopy and perfusion MRI. All cases were IDH-wildtype. Most cases were immunonegative for ATRX (93%) and Olig2 (100%) and exhibited MGMT promoter methylation (82%). The clinical and radiological presentations of adult DHG H3G34-mutant were different from those of established types of adult grade IV gliomas. Median overall survival of adult DHG H3G34-mutant was 12.4 months compared to 19.6 months (p=.56), 11.7 months (p=.45) and 50.5 months (p=0.006) in H3.3 K27M-mutant DMG, IDH-wildtype and IDH-mutant glioblastomas, respectively.
Conclusions: Adult DHG H3G34-mutant are associated with distinct characteristics compared to those of established types of adult WHO grade IV gliomas. The present study supports considering these tumors as a new type of WHO grade IV glioma in future classifications.
Origine | Publication financée par une institution |
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