Multimodal Molecular Analysis of Astroblastoma Enables Reclassification of Most Cases Into More Specific Molecular Entities Matthew D

Multimodal Molecular Analysis of Astroblastoma Enables Reclassification of Most Cases Into More Specific Molecular Entities Matthew D

Brain Pathology ISSN 1015–6305 RESEARCH ARTICLE Multimodal molecular analysis of astroblastoma enables reclassification of most cases into more specific molecular entities Matthew D. Wood 1; Tarik Tihan1; Arie Perry1,2; Geeta Chacko3; Clinton Turner4; Cunfeng Pu5; Christopher Payne6; Alexander Yu6; Serguei I. Bannykh7; David A. Solomon 1 1 Department of Pathology, Division of Neuropathology, 2 Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA. 3 Department of Pathology, Division of Neuropathology, Christian Medical College, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India. 4 Anatomical Pathology, LabPLUS Auckland City Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand. 5 Department of Pathology, 6 Department of Neurosurgery, Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, PA. 7 Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA. Keywords Abstract astroblastoma, CNS-HGNET-MN1, DNA meth- ylation profiling, next-generation sequencing. Astroblastoma is a rare and controversial glioma with variable clinical behavior. The diagnosis currently rests on histologic findings of a circumscribed glioma with Corresponding author: astroblastomatous pseudorosettes and vascular hyalinization. Immunohistochemical studies David A. Solomon, MD, PhD, Division of have suggested different oncogenic drivers, such as BRAF p.V600E, but very few cases have Neuropathology, Department of Pathology, been studied using genome-wide methodologies. Recent genomic profiling identified a University of California San Francisco, 513 subset of CNS embryonal tumors with astroblastoma-like morphology that harbored MN1 Parnassus Ave, Health Sciences West 451, gene fusions, termed “CNS high-grade neuroepithelial tumors with MN1 alteration” (CNS- San Francisco, CA 94143 (E-mail: HGNET-MN1). To further characterize the genetic alterations that drive astroblastomas, we [email protected]) performed targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) of 500 cancer-associated genes in a series of eight cases. We correlated these findings with break-apart fluorescence in situ Received 25 August 2017 hybridization (FISH) analysis of the MN1 locus and genome-wide DNA methylation Accepted 14 September 2017 profiling. Four cases showed MN1 alteration by FISH, including two pediatric cases that Published Online Article Accepted lacked other pathogenic alterations, and two adult cases that harbored other cancer-associated 28 September 2017 gene mutations or copy number alterations (eg, CDKN2A/B homozygous deletion, TP53, ATM and TERT promoter mutations). Three of these cases grouped with the CNS-HGNET- doi:10.1111/bpa.12561 MN1 entity by methylation profiling. Two of four MN1 intact cases by FISH showed genetic features of either anaplastic pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (BRAF p.V600E mutation, CDKN2A/B homozygous deletion and TERT promoter mutation) or IDH-wildtype glioblastoma (trisomy 7, monosomy 10, CDK4 amplification and TP53, NRAS and TERT promoter mutations) and these cases had an aggressive clinical course. Two clinically indolent cases remained unclassifiable despite multimodal molecular analysis. We conclude that astroblastoma histology is not specific for any entity including CNS-HGNET-MN1,and that additional genetic characterization should be considered for astroblastomas, as a number of these tumors likely contain a methylation profile or genetic alterations that suggest classification as other tumor entities. Our heterogeneous molecular findings help to explain the clinical unpredictability of astroblastoma. INTRODUCTION tumors are immunoreactive for glial fibrillary acidic protein Astroblastoma is a rare, circumscribed glial neoplasm, first (GFAP) and lack a diffusely infiltrating component. Due to the rar- described by Bailey and Cushing in the early 20th century and fur- ity of this tumor and its unpredictable outcome, the 2016 WHO ther characterized by Bailey and Bucy in 1930 (3, 4). According to Classification does not currently assign a grade to this entity (20). the World Health Organization (WHO), the diagnosis rests on iden- Although most neuropathologists separate these tumors into well tifying a key histologic feature: extensive perivascular pseudoro- differentiated or anaplastic/malignant forms, there is not a universal settes with thickened, stout or non-tapering cell processes, which criterion for making this distinction (8, 9). Problematically, even are often but not invariably accompanied by focal or extensive scle- within the low- and high-grade categories, the clinical behavior is rosis/hyalinization, usually involving blood vessels (20). Most highly variable (1, 13, 17, 27). Brain Pathology •• (2017) ••–•• 1 VC 2017 International Society of Neuropathology Multimodal molecular analysis of astroblastoma Wood et al Very few cases of astroblastoma have been studied using mod- Tumor histologic features and immunophenotype were compiled ern molecular techniques. One next-generation sequencing study of from examination of available clinical slides, and by performing three cases identified mutations in a few genes known to be altered additional immunohistochemical stains in select cases. Immunohis- in low-grade gliomas, including BCOR, BCORL1, ERBB3, MYB tochemical stains performed at UCSF included GFAP (DAKO rab- and ATM, but no recurrent mutations were seen (5). Importantly, bit polyclonal, 1:3000), oligodendrocyte transcription factor 2 this study did not identify mutations in genes that are commonly (OLIG2, Immuno Bio Labs rabbit polyclonal, 1:200), epithelial altered in infiltrating astrocytoma, such as IDH1, ATRX or TP53, membrane antigen (EMA, Leica clone Gp1.4, prediluted), neurofi- thus differentiating astroblastoma genetically from diffuse gliomas lament (NFIL, Cell Marque clone 2F11, undiluted) and L1 cell and validating previous immunohistochemical findings (2). In adhesion molecule (L1CAM, Sigma clone UJ127.11, 1:1800). another immunohistochemical study of 28 cases, Lehman et al For the genetic analysis, genomic DNA was isolated from tumor identified BRAF p.V600E mutant protein in 38% of cases, raising tissue collected by microdissection from unstained slides, or by the possibility of genetic overlap between astroblastoma and other punching blocks of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue. DNA circumscribed glial neoplasms driven by MAPK pathway altera- was extracted using a Qiagen DNEasy FFPE DNA extraction kit tions such as pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma, ganglioglioma and (Hilden, Germany). The UCSF 500 Cancer Gene Panel and its pilocytic astrocytoma (19). Other genetic studies of astroblastoma, application to neuro-oncology patients has been described previ- including array comparative genomic hybridization, have not iden- ously (14). Briefly, after genomic DNA library preparation, barcod- tified a recurrent, signature genetic abnormality, but have served to ing and hybrid capture-based target enrichment, next-generation distinguish astroblastoma from conventional diffuse glioma or sequencing was performed on an Illumina HiSeq 2500 instrument ependymoma (9). (San Diego, CA, USA). This yielded sequence data from the cod- Recently, an application of DNA methylation profiling to a ing regions of 510 cancer-associated genes, the TERT promoter and series of supratentorial central nervous system embryonal neo- selected introns from 40 genes to detect common gene rearrange- plasms identified a distinct methylation cluster defined by recurrent ments (14). Sequencing of intergenic regions at regular intervals rearrangements involving the meningioma 1 (MN1)geneonchro- across the genome enabled chromosomal copy number assessment. mosome 22q (25). Surprisingly, 39% of these “CNS high-grade The total sequencing footprint is approximately 2.8 MB. neuroepithelial tumors with MN1 alteration” (CNS-HGNET-MN1) The sequencing data was reviewed by two of the investigators cases showed histologic features of astroblastoma, and a majority (MDW and DAS) and alterations were classified for potential path- of tumors with astroblastoma histology in the study fell into the ogenicity based on sequence coverage, tumor mutant allele fre- CNS-HGNET-MN1 cluster of tumors. This raised the possibility quency, reported occurrence in other neoplasms (based on that some tumors diagnosed as astroblastoma using WHO criteria COSMIC and cBioPortal databases) and frequency in human popu- harbor MN1 alterations. Nevertheless, astroblastoma histology was lations (based on the 1000 Genomes Project and Exome Sequenc- ing Project 6500 databases). Focal copy number alterations and clearly not a defining characteristic for CNS-HGNET-MN1,asthe whole chromosomal gains/losses were computed from UCSF 500 majority of cases in this DNA methylation cluster lacked character- sequencing data (26). istic astroblastoma histology (25). This finding, taken along with DNA methylation profiling was performed at the German the prior genetic studies of astroblastoma, raises the possibility that Cancer Research Center in the Department of Pathology at “astroblastoma” is a morphologic pattern that can be seen across a Heidelberg University Hospital in Germany, using methods and spectrum of molecular entities. analysis described by Korshunov et al and Sturm et al (15, 25). To advance our understanding of the molecular features that FISH to assess the MN1 locus was performed using automated define these challenging cases, we applied a targeted next- techniques for deparaffinization on a VP 2000 processor and slide generation sequencing panel covering approximately 500 tumor- pretreatment on a ThermoBrite system (Abbott

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