BACKGROUND:The objective of this study was to describe the clinical and pathologic features and to identify prognostic factors in patients with atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors (AT/RT) of the central nervous system (CNS). METHODS: Patients aged <18 years with newly diagnosed CNS AT/RT who were treated in France between 1998 and 2008 were retrospectively identified. The study included all patients who had a diagnosis of AT/RT confirmed by pathologic review, including immunostaining for INI 1, tumor protein 53 (p53), b-catenin, claudin-6, and Ki-67 and analysis for SMARCB1/hSNF5/INI1 mutation. RESULTS: Fifty-eight patients with confirmed AT/RT were eligible for the current analysis. The median age at diagnosis was 1.4 years (range, 14 days to 8.5 years). The site of the primary tumor was supratentorial in 26 patients, infratentorial in 28 patients and spinal in 4 patients. Loss of INI1 nuclear expression was observed in 49 of 50 evaluable tumors. Positive claudin-6 was observed in 37 of 42 assessed tumors and, in 12 of those tumors, the staining was strong and diffuse. Positive nuclear immunoreactivity for b-catenin was observed in 24 of 44 tumors, and P53 was overexpressed in 31 of 44 tumors. Primary adjuvant therapy included chemotherapy in 47 patients and radiotherapy in 16 patients. The median follow-up was 58 months (range, 9-125 months), and the median survival was 9 months. Multivariate analysis identified age <2 years (P ¼ .01), metastasis at diagnosis (P ¼ .03), and strong immunopositivity for claudin-6 (P ¼ .03) as prognostic factors for the risk of death. CONCLUSIONS: AT/RT tumors in children carry a dismal prognosis. Age <2 years, metastasis at diagnosis, and strong claudin-6 positivity appeared to be independent prognostic factors for outcome. Cancer 2012;118:3812-
Prognosis of ETMR remains dismal despite multimodal therapy. LIN28A immunostaining and 19q13.42 amplification should be systematically done to secure the diagnosis. Complete surgical resection, radiotherapy, and high-dose chemotherapy are associated with better outcome.
We investigated the challenging diagnostic case of a ventricular cystic glioneuronal tumor with papillary features, by RNA sequencing using the Illumina TruSight RNA Fusion panel. We did not retrieve the SLC44A1-PRKCA fusion gene specific for papillary glioneuronal tumor, but an EWSR1-PATZ1 fusion transcript. RT-PCR followed by Sanger sequencing confirmed the EWSR1-PATZ1 fusion. It matched with canonic EWSR1 fusion oncogene, juxtaposing the entire N-terminal transcriptional activation domain of EWSR1 gene and the C-terminal DNA binding domain of a transcription factor gene, PATZ1. PATZ1 protein belongs to the BTB-ZF (broad-complex, tramtrack and bric-à-brac -zinc finger) family. It directly regulates Pou5f1 and Nanog and is essential to maintaining stemness by inhibiting neural differentiation. EWSR1-PATZ1 fusion is a rare event in tumors: it was only reported in six round cell sarcomas and in three gliomas of three exclusively molecular studies. The first reported glioma was a BRAF negative ganglioglioma, the second a BRAF negative glioneuronal tumor, not otherwise specified and the third, very recently reported, a high grade glioma, not otherwise specified. In our study, forty BRAF negative gangliogliomas were screened by FISH using EWSR1 break-apart probes. We performed methylation profiling for the index case and for seven out of the ten FISH positive cases. The index case clustered apart from other pediatric low grade glioneuronal entities, and specifically from the well-defined ganglioglioma methylation group. An additional pediatric intraventricular ganglioglioma clustered slightly more closely with ganglioglioma, but showed differences from the main ganglioglioma group and similarities with the index case. Both cases harbored copy number variations at the PATZ1 locus. EWSR1-PATZ1 gene fusion might define a new type of glioneuronal tumors, distinct from gangliogliomas.
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