scholarly journals HGG-35. PEDIATRIC PLEOMORPHIC XANTHOASTROCYTOMA WITH ANAPLASIA TREATED WITH SURGERY AND ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY: A CASE SERIES OF 3 LONG-TERM SURVIVORS

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii350-iii350
Author(s):  
Rebecca Ronsley ◽  
Christopher Dunham ◽  
Stephen Yip ◽  
Juliette Hukin ◽  
Sylvia Cheng

Abstract OBJECTIVE Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA) with anaplasia is a rare histological subtype of central nervous system astrocytoma and generally treated as high grade gliomas. The optimal extent of therapy required is unknown. Here we report on 3 pediatric cases of PXA with anaplasia. We also describe molecular features and methylation profile of PXA with anaplasia compared to age-matched PXA without anaplasia. METHODS Our institutional database was queried for cases of PXA since 1998 and 3 cases with anaplasia were identified and records reviewed. RESULTS 2/3 patients were male and all were aged 12 at diagnosis. All underwent a gross total resection (GTR), where the diagnosis of PXA with anaplasia was made. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that two cases were BRAF V600E positive and two were CD34 positive. Methylation profiling revealed unique pattern of CpG methylation/unmethylation. All patients underwent 5400cGy radiation to the surgical bed. 2/3 patients received concurrent temozolamide with radiation followed by maintenance chemotherapy with temozolamide and lomustine for 6 cycles as per the Children’s Oncology Group Protocol ACNS0423. These two patients had a continued complete response. The third patient received temozolamide following radiation and subsequently had recurrent disease at the end of treatment and went on to have a re-resection GTR and achieved complete response after 6 cycles of lomustine, vincristine and procarbazine. All are alive with no evidence of disease at more than 2 years post treatment completion (OS=100%,EFS=67%). CONCLUSIONS This rare pediatric tumor is not well understood. The genetic landscape may be informative for optimizing treatment and prognosis.

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Ronsley ◽  
Christopher Dunham ◽  
Stephen Yip ◽  
Lindsay Brown ◽  
Jeffrey A Zuccato ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (APXA) is a rare subtype of CNS astrocytoma. They are generally treated as high-grade gliomas; however, uncertainty exists regarding the optimal therapy. Here, we report on 3 pediatric cases of APXA. Methods Our institutional database was queried for cases of APXA and 3 cases were identified. Surgical samples were processed for methylation profiling and chromosomal microarray analysis. Methylation data were uploaded to the online CNS tumor classifier to determine methylation-based diagnoses to determine copy number variations (CNVs). Results Two patients were male, 1 female, and all were aged 12 years at diagnosis. All underwent a gross total resection (GTR) and were diagnosed with an APXA. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that 2 cases were BRAF V600E positive. Methylation-based tumor classification supported the APXA diagnosis in all cases. CNV analyses revealed homozygous CKDN2A deletions in all and chromosome 9p loss in 2 cases. All patients received radiation therapy (54 Gy in 30 fractions) with concurrent temozolomide. Two patients received maintenance chemotherapy with temozolomide and lomustine for 6 cycles as per the Children’s Oncology Group ACNS0423. The third patient recurred and went on to receive a second GTR and 6 cycles of lomustine, vincristine, and procarbazine. All are alive with no evidence of disease >4 years post-treatment completion (overall survival = 100%, event free survival = 67%). Conclusions The natural history and optimal treatment of this rare pediatric tumor are not well understood. This case series supports the use of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy in the treatment of APXA. The genetic landscape may be informative for optimizing treatment and prognosis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiying Lin ◽  
Runwei Yang ◽  
Haojie Zheng ◽  
Zhiyong Li ◽  
Guozhong Yi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA), anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (A-PXA), and epithelioid glioblastoma (E-GBM) show overlapping features. However, little is known about their clinical characteristics, molecular features and relationship with progression. Methods: Fourteen patients diagnosed at Nanfang Hospital from 2016 to 2019 were enrolled, including eleven PXA patients, two A-PXA patients, and one E-GBM patient. All tumour tissue samples of the fourteen patients were examined by immunohistochemical staining (MGMT, VEGF, BRAF-V600E, etc.). The recurrent tumour tissue of the patient with E-GBM arising from A-PXA was screened to detect 11 glioma markers (MGMT, BRAF-V600E, etc.) and chromosome 1p/19q by next-generation sequencing (NGS).Results: The mean age of 13 patients with PXA or A-PXA was 25.4 years; twelve of these patients had tumours at supratentorial regions. VEGF positivity was detected in the tumour samples of 13 patients, MGMT positivity in 10 patients, and BRAF-V600E positivity in 7 patients. For the tumour sample of the E-GBM patient who survived for up to 10 years after the fourth resection, BRAF V600E was wild type in the sample obtained from the first surgery, while it was mutant in the second, third, and fourth surgeries. In contrast, the promoter status of MGMT in the four surgeries was unmethylated. The NGS results showed that the mutation frequencies of BRAF V600E in the second, third and fourth surgeries were 14.06%, 9.13% and 48.29%, respectively.Conclusions: Collectively, the results suggest that patients with A-PXA may relapse multiple times and eventually progress to E-GBM with the BRAF-V600E mutation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiying Lin ◽  
Runwei Yang ◽  
Haojie Zheng ◽  
Zhiyong Li ◽  
Guozhong Yi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA), anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (A-PXA), and epithelioid glioblastoma (E-GBM) show overlapping features. However, little is known about their clinical characteristics, molecular features and progression relationship. Methods: Fourteen patients diagnosed at Nanfang Hospital from 2016 to 2019 were enrolled, including eleven PXA patients, two A-PXA patients, and one E-GBM patient. All tumor tissue samples of fourteen patients were examined by immunohistochemistry staining (MGMT, VEGF, BRAF-V600E, etc.). The recurred tumor tissue of the E-GBM patient arising from A-PXA was detected for 11 glioma markers (MGMT, BRAF-V600E, etc.) and chromosome 1p/19q by next generation sequencing (NGS). Results: The mean age of 13 patients with PXA or A-PXA was 25.4 years, twelve of whom were burdened with tumors at supratentorial regions. VEGF showed positive expression in the tumor samples of 13 patients, MGMT positive in 10 patients, and BRAF-V600E positive in 7 patients. As for the tumor sample of the E-GBM patient survived for up to 10 years after the fourth resections, BRAF V600E was wild-type in the sample obtained from the first surgery while it was mutant in the second, third, and fourth surgery. In the contrast, the promoter status of MGMT in four operations were unmethylated. The NGS results showed that the mutation frequencies of BRAF V600E in the second surgery, the third surgery and the fourth surgery were 14.06%, 9.13% and 48.29% respectively. Conclusions: Collectively, the results suggest that patients with A-PXA may relapse multiple times and eventually progress to E-GBM with BRAF-V600E mutation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiying Lin ◽  
Runwei Yang ◽  
Haojie Zheng ◽  
Zhiyong Li ◽  
Guozhong Yi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA), anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (A-PXA), and epithelioid glioblastoma (E-GBM) show overlapping features. However, little is known about their clinical characteristics, molecular features and relationship with progression. Methods: Fourteen patients diagnosed at Nanfang Hospital from 2016 to 2019 were enrolled, including eleven PXA patients, two A-PXA patients, and one E-GBM patient. All tumour tissue samples of the fourteen patients were examined by immunohistochemical staining (MGMT, VEGF, BRAF-V600E, etc.). The recurrent tumour tissue of the patient with E-GBM arising from A-PXA was screened to detect 11 glioma markers (MGMT, BRAF-V600E, etc.) and chromosome 1p/19q by next-generation sequencing (NGS).Results: The mean age of 13 patients with PXA or A-PXA was 25.4 years; twelve of these patients had tumours at supratentorial regions. VEGF positivity was detected in the tumour samples of 13 patients, MGMT positivity in 10 patients, and BRAF-V600E positivity in 7 patients. For the tumour sample of the E-GBM patient who survived for up to 10 years after the fourth resection, BRAF V600E was wild type in the sample obtained from the first surgery, while it was mutant in the second, third, and fourth surgeries. In contrast, the promoter status of MGMT in the four surgeries was unmethylated. The NGS results showed that the mutation frequencies of BRAF V600E in the second, third and fourth surgeries were 14.06%, 9.13% and 48.29%, respectively.Conclusions: Collectively, the results suggest that patients with A-PXA may relapse multiple times and eventually progress to E-GBM with the BRAF-V600E mutation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 55 (3) ◽  
pp. 674-681
Author(s):  
Mai K. ElMallah ◽  
Ankit K. Desai ◽  
Erica B. Nading ◽  
Stephanie DeArmey ◽  
Richard M. Kravitz ◽  
...  

1993 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 400-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
H I Scher ◽  
N L Geller ◽  
T Curley ◽  
Y Tao

PURPOSE To evaluate the received dose-intensity in a mature data set of patients with advanced urothelial cancer who received at least one cycle of the methotrexate (M), vinblastine (V), Adriamycin ([A], doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH), and cisplatin (C) regimen (M-VAC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Received dose-intensity was evaluated over time by summing doses over cycles for each patient, cumulating treatment times, and assuming four cycles of chemotherapy were planned. Relative cumulative dose-intensity was then calculated for individual patients at the end of each cycle. To assess a relationship with survival, relative cumulative dose-intensity was then used as a time-dependent covariate in Cox regression. RESULTS The median follow-up was 6 years and median survival 13.3 months, with 20 patients alive at the time of analysis. Out of a maximum of 1.0, the median relative dose-intensity for the M-VAC combination decreased from .69 to .59 from cycle 1 to cycle 4. Similarly, a decrease from .68 to .62 and from .80 to .72 was observed for A and C, respectively. The median received dose-intensity for A was 6.0 mg/m2/wk, and for C 14 mg/m2/wk. Neither the four-cycle relative cumulative dose-intensity for the M-VAC combination, nor the relative cumulative dose-intensities for A or C were found to be significant prognostic factors. CONCLUSION The absence of an effect for received dose-intensity on survival may reflect the low dose-intensities of the components of the regimen actually delivered in this study. The results question whether the individual agents can be escalated sufficiently, with growth factor support, to improve significantly complete response proportions, a prerequisite for increasing the proportion of long-term survivors.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1510-1510
Author(s):  
Katerina Pokorna ◽  
Carole Le Pogam ◽  
Martine Chopin ◽  
Bruno Cassinat ◽  
Pierre Fenaux ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1510 Background: Relapses are now relatively rare in APL and occur mainly in the bone marrow (BM) within 3 years of complete response achievement, but later BM relapses can also occur (Kelaidi, Leukemia 2006), while a few cases of extramedullary (EM) relapse are observed, particularly in the central nervous system (CNS) (De Botton, Leukemia 2006). The transplantable transgenic mouse model of APL is a well characterized preclinical model which mimics human APL in its biological characteristics. We have previously reported the response of these mice to ATRA and a combination of ATRA with a DNA vaccine (Padua, Nat Med 2003, Fuguraki, Blood 2010). We analyzed in those treated mice the presence of PML-RARα transcripts in the peripheral blood (PB), BM and various organs and tissues. Methods: The reproducible APL development was obtained, as previously described (Padua Nat Med 2003) by intravenous injection of 104 spleen cells from APL transgenic mice expressing the human PML-RARα cDNA (bcr1) into syngeneic recipients. ATRA and the DNA vaccine (a plasmid containing PML-RARα cDNA (bcr1) sequence fused to the tetanus toxin fragment C) were administered as described (Padua Nat Med 2003). In this model, ATRA alone gives transient remissions, while about 30 % of APL mice treated with ATRA combined with a DNA vaccine achieve long-term remissions. A standardized RT-qPCR MRD monitoring protocol was applied to assess PML-RARα-positive cell clearance in PB and BM. In this assay, the number of PML-RARα transcripts was normalized (normalized copy number or NCN) to 106 copies of 18S rRNA transcripts, allowing us to detect up to 1 PML-RARα-positive cell among 104 negative cells. Taking advantage of the presence of PML-RARα cDNA transgene in the transplanted leukemia cells, we next used genomic DNA as template for a qPCR assay, allowing us to use 10 times more template and increased sensitivity (1 in 105) in order to examine the presence of PML-RARα-positive cells in various organs and tissues of long-term survivors (LTS, ie with survival > 120 days). Results: APL mice treated with ATRA alone (n=55), ATRA combined with PML-RARαFrC DNA (n=94) or untreated (n=65) were analyzed. Untreated APL mice always remained positive in the PB and BM for PML-RARα transcripts, and in organs and tissues positive for PML-RARα cDNA. On day 60, in the surviving ATRA-treated mice (n=21), 15 (71%) had PB PML-RARα normalized copy number (NCN)>100, 6 (29 %) an NCN between 10–100 and none an NCN<10, while in ATRA+DNA-treated mice (n=35), 11 (31%) had NCN>100, 9 (26%) NCN between 10–100 and 15 (43%) NCN<10 (p<0.01). ATRA+DNA-treated mice achieving NCN<10 (43%) constituted the group with the best survival (p<0.0001). To further assess tumour burden, LTS were sacrificed at different time intervals. No PML-RARα transcripts were detected in PB and BM of any LTS (n=15) suggesting complete molecular remission. On the other hand, while PML-RARα cDNA, analyzed by qPCR in skin, salivary glands, thymus, kidney, muscle, heart, spleen, liver, lung and CNS was negative in all tissues in 10 (67%) LTS, it was positive in 5 (33%) LTS, including 4 in the CNS (2 of them were also positive in the spleen) and 1 in the spleen only. Conclusion: In this preclinical model, analyzed with sensitive molecular assays, while two thirds treated long-term survivors were in molecular remission in PB, BM and other organs studied, about one third still had leukemic cells, mainly in the CNS and to a lesser extent in the spleen. This model could be of interest to better understand relapses in APL patients, especially late and CNS relapses and to evaluate drugs aimed at eliminating those reservoirs of residual cells. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haihui Jiang ◽  
Kefu Yu ◽  
Yong Cui ◽  
Xiaohui Ren ◽  
Mingxiao Li ◽  
...  

BackgroundGlioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive intracranial tumor which can be divided into two subtypes based on status of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH). A small fraction of patients after receiving standard treatment can be long-term survivors (LTS). This study was designed to disclose the predictors and clinical implications associated with LTS in IDH wildtype and mutant GBM.MethodsPatients who survived beyond five years after diagnosis of GBM were defined as LTS, while those with a survival less than one year were defined as short-term survivors (STS). A total of 211 patients with diagnosis of GBM in Beijing Tiantan Hospital from January 2007 to January 2015 were enrolled, including 44 (20.9%) LTS and 167 (79.1%) STS. The clinical, radiological and molecular features between groups were systematically compared.ResultsCompared with STS, LTS were a subgroup of patients with a younger age at diagnosis (P=0.006), a higher KPS score (P=0.011), higher rates of cystic change (P=0.037), O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter methylation (P=0.007), and IDH mutation (P=0.049), and more likely to have undergone gross total resection (P&lt;0.001). Survival analysis demonstrated that LTS with wildtype IDH conferred a longer progression-free survival (66.0 vs. 27.0 months, P=0.04), but a shorter post-progression survival (46.5 months vs. not reached, P=0.0001) than those of LTS with mutant IDH. LTS with mutant IDH showed a trend towards increased survival after receiving re-operation (P=0.155) and reirradiation (P=0.127), while this clinical benefit disappeared in the subset of LTS with wildtype IDH (P&gt;0.05).ConclusionThe prognostic value and therapeutic implications associated with LTS in GBM population significantly differed on the basis of IDH status. Our findings provide a new approach for physicians to better understand the two subtypes of GBM, which may assist in making more tailored treatment decisions for patients.


2020 ◽  
Vol 133 (6) ◽  
pp. 1704-1709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron Bernstein ◽  
Oliver D. Mrowczynski ◽  
Amrit Greene ◽  
Sandra Ryan ◽  
Catherine Chung ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVEBRAF V600E is a common oncogenic driver in a variety of primary brain tumors. Dual inhibitor therapy using dabrafenib (a selective oral inhibitor of several mutated forms of BRAF kinase) and trametinib (a reversible inhibitor of MEK1 and MEK2) has been used successfully for treatment of metastatic melanoma, anaplastic thyroid cancer, and other tumor types, but has been reported in only a few patients with primary brain tumors and none with pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma. Here, the authors report on the substantial clinical response and reduction in cutaneous toxicity in a case series of BRAF V600E primary brain cancers treated with dual BRAF/MEK inhibitor therapy.METHODSThe authors treated 4 BRAF V600E patients, each with a different type of primary brain tumor (pilocytic astrocytoma, papillary craniopharyngioma, ganglioglioma, and pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma) with the combination of dabrafenib and trametinib.RESULTSThe patients with pilocytic astrocytoma, pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma, and papillary craniopharyngioma experienced near-complete radiographic and complete clinical responses after 8 weeks of therapy. A substantial partial response (by RANO [Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology] criteria) was observed in the patient with ganglioglioma. The patient with craniopharyngioma developed dramatic, diffuse verrucal keratosis within 2 weeks of starting dabrafenib. This completely resolved within 2 weeks of adding trametinib.CONCLUSIONSDual BRAF/MEK inhibitor therapy represents an exciting treatment option for patients with BRAF V600E primary brain tumors. In addition to greater efficacy than single-agent dabrafenib, this combination has the potential to mitigate cutaneous toxicity, one of the most common and concerning BRAF inhibitor–related adverse events.


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