The Definition of Primary and Secondary Glioblastoma
Centre international de recherche sur le cancer
Abstract
Glioblastoma is the most frequent and malignant brain tumor. The vast majority of glioblastomas (~90%) develop rapidly de novo in elderly patients, without clinical or histologic evidence of a less malignant precursor lesion (primary glioblastomas). Secondary glioblastomas progress from low-grade diffuse astrocytoma or anaplastic astrocytoma. They manifest in younger patients, have a lesser degree of necrosis, are preferentially located in the frontal lobe, and carry a significantly better prognosis. Histologically, primary and secondary glioblastomas are largely indistinguishable, but they differ in their genetic and epigenetic profiles. Decisive genetic signposts of secondary glioblastoma are IDH1 mutations,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.03
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 104
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- IDH1
- Anaplastic astrocytoma
- Pathology
- Astrocytoma
- Glioblastoma
- Brain tumor
- Phenotype
- Medicine
- Good health and well-being