Gliomatosis cerebri in children: A poor prognostic phenotype of diffuse gliomas with a distinct molecular profile

Neuro Oncol. 2024 May 8:noae080. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noae080. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Background: The term Gliomatosis cerebri (GC), a radiology-defined highly infiltrating diffuse glioma, has been abandoned since molecular GC-associated features have not been established yet.

Methods: We conducted a multinational retrospective study of 104 children and adolescents with GC providing comprehensive clinical and (epi-)genetic characterization.

Results: Median overall survival (OS) was 15.5 months (interquartile range, 10.9-27.7) with a 2-years survival rate of 28%. Histopathological grading correlated significantly with median OS: CNS WHO grade II: 47.8 months (25.2-55.7); grade III: 15.9 months (11.4-26.3); grade IV: 10.4 months (8.8-14.4). By DNA methylation profiling (n=49), most tumors were classified as pediatric-type diffuse high-grade glioma (pedHGG), H3-/IDH-wildtype (n=31/49, 63.3%) with enriched subclasses pedHGG_RTK2 (n=19), pedHGG_A/B (n=6), and pedHGG_MYCN (n=5), but only one pedHGG_RTK1 case. Within the pedHGG, H3-/IDH-wildtype subgroup, recurrent alterations in EGFR (n=10) and BCOR (n=9) were identified. Additionally, we observed structural aberrations in chromosome 6 in 16/49 tumors (32.7%) across tumor types. In the pedHGG, H3-/IDH-wildtype subgroup TP53 alterations had a significant negative effect on OS.

Conclusion: Contrary to previous studies, our representative pediatric GC study provides evidence that GC has a strong predilection to arise on the background of specific molecular features (especially pedHGG_RTK2, pedHGG_A/B, EGFR and BCOR mutations, chromosome 6 rearrangements).

Keywords: H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype; Pediatric-type glioma; chromosome 6; gliomatosis cerebri; pedHGG_RTK2; pediatric-type high-grade glioma.