These guidelines for the management of patients up to 18 years with Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH) have been set up by a group of experts involved in the Euro Histio Net project who participated in national or international studies and in peer reviewed publications. Existing guidelines were reviewed and changed where new evidence was available in the literature up to 2012. Data and publications have been ranked according to evidence based medicine and when there was a lack of published data, consensus between experts was sought. Guidelines for diagnosis, initial clinical work-up, and treatment and long-term follow-up of LCH patients are presented.
Tumor-derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) has biomarker potential; therefore, this study aimed to identify cfDNA in the aqueous humor (AH) of retinoblastoma eyes and correlate somatic chromosomal copy-number alterations (SCNA) with clinical outcomes, specifically eye salvage. AH was extracted via paracentesis during intravitreal injection of chemotherapy or enucleation. Shallow whole-genome sequencing was performed using isolated cfDNA to assess for highly recurrent SCNAs in retinoblastoma including gain of 1q, 2p, 6p, loss of 13q, 16q, and focal amplification. Sixty-three clinical specimens of AH from 29 eyes of 26 patients were evaluated; 13 eyes were enucleated and 16 were salvaged (e.g., saved). The presence of detectable SCNAs was 92% in enucleated eyes versus 38% in salvaged eyes ( = 0.006). Gain of chromosome 6p was the most common SCNA found in 77% of enucleated eyes, compared with 25% of salvaged eyes ( = 0.0092), and associated with a 10-fold increased odds of enucleation (OR, 10; 95% CI, 1.8-55.6). The median amplitude of 6p gain was 1.47 in enucleated versus 1.07 in salvaged eyes ( = 0.001). The presence of AH SCNAs was correlated retrospectively with eye salvage. The probability of ocular salvage was higher in eyes without detectable SCNAs in the AH ( = 0.0028), specifically 6p gain. This is the first study to correlate clinical outcomes with SCNAs in the AH from retinoblastoma eyes, as such these findings indicate that 6p gain in the aqueous humor is a potential prognostic biomarker for poor clinical response to therapy. The correlation of clinical outcomes and SCNAs in the AH identified in the current study requires prospective studies to validate these finding before SCNAs, like 6p gain, can be used to predict clinical outcomes at diagnosis. .
Kaplan-Meier estimates of eye survival of Group D eyes in bilateral patients at 12 months is 82% (95% confidence interval [CI] 70.1-89.7%); at 60 months eye survival is estimated to be 68% (95% confidence interval [CI] 55.4-82.8%). Systemic treatment for retinoblastoma demonstrated a high rate of globe preservation with acceptable complications and many eyes retaining functional vision.
◥Aqueous humor contains tumor-derived cell-free DNA (cfDNA) and can serve as a liquid biopsy for retinoblastoma. We previously associated somatic copy-number alteration (SCNA) 6p gain with a 10-fold increased risk of enucleation. Here we provide a 2-year update to further explore 6p gain as a prognostic biomarker for ocular survival. Patients diagnosed with retinoblastoma from December 2014 to July 2019 from whom aqueous humor was sampled were included. cfDNA was extracted and shallow whole-genome sequencing performed to identify highly recurrent retinoblastoma SCNAs (gain of 1q, 2p, 6p, loss of 13q, 16q). 116 aqueous humor samples from 50 eyes of 46 patients were included: 27 eyes were salvaged, 23 were enucleated. Highly recurrent retinoblastoma SCNAs were found in 66% eyes. 6p gain was the most prevalent SCNA (50% eyes). It was particularly more prevalent in enucleated eyes (73.9%) than in salvaged eyes (29.6%; P ¼ 0.004). 6p gain in aqueous humor cfDNA portended nearly 10-fold increased odds of enucleation (OR ¼ 9.87; 95% confidence interval ¼ 1.75-55.65; P ¼ 0.009). In the enucleated eyes, 6p gain was associated with aggressive histopathologic features, including necrosis, higher degrees of anaplasia, and focal invasion of ocular structures. With extended follow-up and nearly double the aqueous humor samples, we continue to demonstrate 6p gain as a potential prognostic biomarker for retinoblastoma.Implications: Aqueous humor is a high-yield source of tumorderived DNA in retinoblastoma eyes. Detection of 6p gain in the aqueous humor allows for targeted, patient-centered therapies based on this molecular prognostic marker. Prospective, multicenter studies with aqueous humor sampled from all eyes at diagnosis are warranted to validate these findings.
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