articleJournal of Clinical OncologyMay 18, 2010BRONZE OA

Integrated Molecular Genetic Profiling of Pediatric High-Grade Gliomas Reveals Key Differences With the Adult Disease

Brain Tumour Research

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

Significant differences in copy number alterations distinguish childhood and adult glioblastoma. PDGFRA was the predominant target of focal amplification in childhood HGG, including diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas, and gene expression analyses supported an important role for deregulated PDGFRalpha signaling in pediatric HGG. No IDH1 hotspot mutations were found in pediatric tumors, highlighting molecular differences with adult secondary glioblastoma. Pediatric and adult glioblastomas were clearly distinguished by frequent gain of chromosome 1q (30% v 9%, respectively) and lower frequency of chromosome 7 gain (13% v 74%, respectively) and 10q loss (35% v 80%, respectively). PDGFRA amplification and 1q gain occurred at significantly higher frequency in irradiation-induced tumors, suggesting that these are initiating events in childhood gliomagenesis. A subset of pediatric HGGs showed minimal copy number changes.

Conclusion

Integrated molecular profiling showed substantial differences in the molecular features underlying pediatric and adult HGG, indicating that findings in adult tumors cannot be simply extrapolated to younger patients. PDGFRalpha may be a useful target for pediatric HGG, including diffuse pontine gliomas.

Citation impact

657
total citations
FWCI
25.10
Percentile
100%
References
56
Citations per year

Authors

17

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • PDGFRA
  • Glioma
  • Medicine
  • Copy-number variation
  • Cancer research
  • Gene expression profiling
  • ATRX
  • IDH1
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.

Funding