Posterior fossa and spinal gangliogliomas form two distinct clinicopathologic and molecular subgroups

K Gupta, W Orisme, JH Harreld, I Qaddoumi… - Acta neuropathologica …, 2014 - Springer
K Gupta, W Orisme, JH Harreld, I Qaddoumi, JD Dalton, C Punchihewa…
Acta neuropathologica communications, 2014Springer
Background Gangliogliomas are low-grade glioneuronal tumors of the central nervous
system and the commonest cause of chronic intractable epilepsy. Most gangliogliomas (>
70%) arise in the temporal lobe, and infratentorial tumors account for less than 10%.
Posterior fossa gangliogliomas can have the features of a classic supratentorial tumor or a
pilocytic astrocytoma with focal gangliocytic differentiation, and this observation led to the
hypothesis tested in this study-gangliogliomas of the posterior fossa and spinal cord consist …
Background
Gangliogliomas are low-grade glioneuronal tumors of the central nervous system and the commonest cause of chronic intractable epilepsy. Most gangliogliomas (>70%) arise in the temporal lobe, and infratentorial tumors account for less than 10%. Posterior fossa gangliogliomas can have the features of a classic supratentorial tumor or a pilocytic astrocytoma with focal gangliocytic differentiation, and this observation led to the hypothesis tested in this study - gangliogliomas of the posterior fossa and spinal cord consist of two morphologic types that can be distinguished by specific genetic alterations.
Results
Histological review of 27 pediatric gangliogliomas from the posterior fossa and spinal cord indicated that they could be readily placed into two groups: classic gangliogliomas (group I; n = 16) and tumors that appeared largely as a pilocytic astrocytoma, but with foci of gangliocytic differentiation (group II; n = 11). Detailed radiological review, which was blind to morphologic assignment, identified a triad of features, hemorrhage, midline location, and the presence of cysts or necrosis, that distinguished the two morphological groups with a sensitivity of 91% and specificity of 100%. Molecular genetic analysis revealed BRAF duplication and a KIAA1549-BRAF fusion gene in 82% of group II tumors, but in none of the group I tumors, and a BRAF:p.V600E mutation in 43% of group I tumors, but in none of the group II tumors.
Conclusions
Our study provides support for a classification that would divide infratentorial gangliogliomas into two categories, (classic) gangliogliomas and pilocytic astrocytomas with gangliocytic differentiation, which have distinct morphological, radiological, and molecular characteristics.
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