Purpose Although maximal resection of wild-type GBM tumors is associated with longer survival, the association of genomic alterations with the ability to resect disease has not been elucidated. This study aimed to determine whether certain molecular alterations are less amenable to surgical resection and whether achieving a surgical margin devoid of tumor cell burden provides a clinical benefit. Methods Molecular profiling of 148 consecutive tumor samples from newly diagnosed patients with IDH-WT GBM SNaPshot genotyping, and methylation-specific PCR for MGMT promoter methylation. The association of alterations with residual volume and progression-free survival was evaluated in regression analyses. We prospectively investigated the impact of TERTp status at the surgical margin on progression-free survival (PFS) in 47 patients. PFS and overall survival (OS) were evaluated with the log-rank test and Cox regression models.Results Overall, 148 patients (91 men [61.5%], median age, 62.5 years [range 56–70 years] had maximally safe surgery. The median follow-up duration was 18 months (IQR, 4-32 months). The rate of PFS was significantly lower in MGMT promoter unmethylated IDH-WT GBM amenable to resection with residual volume >4.9cc (hazard ratio [HR], 2.35; 95% CI, 1.44-3.84; P=.005). Gene amplification (PDGFRA, KIT, KDR) on 4q12 and TP53 and RB1 mutations were associated with greater RV. Prospective trial revealed median PFS for tumors with TERTp mutations in the surgical margin was 10.1 months while tumors with undetectable TERTp mutations in the margin did not progress (median follow-up 8.1 months, IQR 1.6-14.6). Surgical tumor margins devoid of TERTp mutations were associated with significantly different probability of PFS (0.23; 95%CI 0.15-0.43; P< 0.01)Conclusion In conclusion, 4q12 amplification (KDR/PDGFRA/KIT) and tumor suppressor gene alterations (RB1, TP53) were associated with greater residual volume. Tumor-free margins defined spatially by intraoperative navigation as assessed by quantifying TERTp mutation allelic fraction was correlated with prolonged PFS.
This protocol describes a qPCR-based assay that is designed to detect twelve potential mutations from clinical specimens that are significant to CNS neoplasms. The assay is optimized for plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), where both cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and DNA derived from circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can be analyzed.
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