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"Azizi, Amedeo"
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ERN GENTURIS guidelines on constitutional mismatch repair deficiency diagnosis, genetic counselling, surveillance, quality of life, and clinical management
by
Colas, Chrystelle
,
Guerrini-Rousseau, Léa
,
Gallon, Richard
in
631/67/2332
,
692/700/459/1748
,
Bioinformatics
2024
Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD), first described 25 years ago, confers an extremely high and lifelong cancer risk, including haematologic, brain, and gastrointestinal tract malignancies, and is associated with several non-neoplastic features. Our understanding of this condition has improved and novel assays to assist CMMRD diagnosis have been developed. Surveillance protocols need adjustment taking into account recent observational prospective studies assessing their effectiveness. Response to immune checkpoint inhibitors and the effectiveness and toxicity of other treatments have been described. An update and merging of the different guidelines on diagnosis and clinical management of CMMRD into one comprehensive guideline was needed. Seventy-two expert members of the European Reference Network GENTURIS and/or the European care for CMMRD consortium and one patient representative developed recommendations for CMMRD diagnosis, genetic counselling, surveillance, quality of life, and clinical management based on a systematic literature search and comprehensive literature review and a modified Delphi process. Recommendations for the diagnosis of CMMRD provide testing criteria, propose strategies for CMMRD testing, and define CMMRD diagnostic criteria. Recommendations for surveillance cover each CMMRD-associated tumour type and contain information on starting age, frequency, and surveillance modality. Recommendations for clinical management cover cancer treatment, management of benign tumours or non-neoplastic features, and chemoprevention. Recommendations also address genetic counselling and quality of life. Based on existing guidelines and currently available data, we present 82 recommendations to improve and standardise the care of CMMRD patients in Europe. These recommendations are not meant to be prescriptive and may be adjusted based on individual decisions.
Journal Article
The telovelar approach for fourth ventricular tumors in children: is removal of the posterior arch of C1 necessary?
by
Cho, Anna
,
Herta, Johannes
,
Hedrich, Cora
in
Adolescent
,
Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms - diagnostic imaging
,
Cerebral Ventricle Neoplasms - surgery
2024
Purpose
Various surgical nuances of the telovelar approach have been suggested. The necessity of removing the posterior arch of C1 to accomplish optimal tumor exposure is still debated. Therefore, we report on our experience and technical details of the fourth ventricular tumor resection in a modified prone position without systematic removal of the posterior arch of C1.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of all pediatric patients, who underwent a fourth ventricular tumor resection in the modified prone position between 2012 and 2021, was performed.
Results
We identified 40 patients with a median age of 6 years and a M:F ratio of 25:15. A telovelar approach was performed in all cases. In 39/40 patients, the posterior arch of C1 was not removed. In the remaining patient, the reason for removing C1 was tumor extension below the level of C2 with ventral extension. Gross or near total resection could be achieved in 34/39 patients, and subtotal resection in 5/39 patients. In none of the patients, a limited exposure, sight of view, or range of motion caused by the posterior arch of C1 was encountered, necessitating an unplanned removal of the posterior arch of C1. Importantly, in none of the cases, the surgeon had the impression of a limited sight of view to the most rostral parts of the fourth ventricle, which necessitated a vermian incision.
Conclusion
A telovelar approach without the removal of the posterior arch of C1 allows for an optimal exposure of the fourth ventricle provided that critical nuances in patient positioning are considered.
Journal Article
Does elevated glucose metabolism correlate with higher cell density in Neurofibromatosis type 1 associated peripheral nerve sheath tumors?
by
Mayerhoefer, Marius E.
,
Beitzke, Dietrich
,
Traub-Weidinger, Tatjana
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Biology and Life Sciences
2017
To investigate whether elevated glucose metabolism in neurofibroma, determined by [F18]-FDG-PET, is correlated with cell density in MRI, as expressed through the apparent diffusion coefficient.
Patients diagnosed with neurofibromatosis type 1 and peripheral nerve sheath tumors (PNST) were enrolled in this prospective, IRB-approved study. After a single [F18]-FDG injection, patients consecutively underwent [F18]-FDG-PET/CT and [F18]-FDG-PET/MRI on the same day. Maximum and mean standardized uptake values (SUVmax, SUVmean) on [F18]-FDG-PET/CT and [F18]-FDG-PET/MRI were compared, and correlated with minimum and mean apparent diffusion coefficients (ADCmean, ADCmin).
A total of 12 (6 male/6 female, mean age was 16.2 ± 5.2 years) patients were prospectively included and analyzed on a per-lesion (n = 39) basis. The SUVmean of examined PNST showed a moderate negative correlation with the ADCmean (r = -.441) and ADCmin (r = -.477), which proved to be statistically significant (p = .005 and p = .002). The SUVmax of the respective lesions, however, showed a weaker negative correlation for ADCmean (r: -.311) and ADCmin (r: -.300) and did not reach statistical significance (p = .054 and p = .057). Lesion-based correlation between [F18]-FDG-PET/MRI and [F18]-FDG-PET/CT showed a moderate correlation for SUVmax (r = .353; p = .027) and a strong one for SUVmean (r = .879; p = .001)). Patient-based liver uptake (SUVmax and mean) of [F18]-FDG-PET/MRI and [F18]-FDG-PET/CT were strongly positively correlated (r = .827; p < .001 and r = .721; p < .001) but differed significantly (p < .001).
We found a statistically significant, negative correlation between glucose metabolism and cell density in PNST. Thus, ADCmean and ADCmin could possibly add complimentary information to the SUVmax and SUVmean and may serve as a potential determinant of malignant transformation of PNST.
Journal Article
Distribution of Bevacizumab into the Cerebrospinal Fluid of Children and Adolescents with Recurrent Brain Tumors
by
Knaack, Ursula
,
Senfter, Daniel
,
Minichmayr, Iris K.
in
Angiogenesis
,
Brain cancer
,
Cancer therapies
2024
Background
To date, evidence has been lacking regarding bevacizumab pharmacokinetics in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
Objective
This study assessed the penetration of bevacizumab, as part of a metronomic antiangiogenic treatment regimen, into the CSF of children, adolescents, and young adults with recurrent brain tumors.
Patients and Methods
Serum and CSF concentrations, malignant cells, and vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A) were analyzed in 12 patients (5–27 years) following 10 mg/kg bevacizumab intravenous biweekly administration (EudraCT number 2009-013024-23). A population pharmacokinetic model including body weight, albumin, and tumor type as influential factors was extended to quantify the CSF penetration of bevacizumab.
Results
Apart from in serum (minimum concentration/maximum concentration [
C
min
/
C
max
] 77.0–305/267–612 mg/L, median 144/417 mg/L), bevacizumab could be quantified in the CSF (0.01–2.26 mg/L, median 0.35 mg/L). The CSF/serum ratio was 0.16 and highly variable between patients. Malignant cells could be detected in CSF before initiation of treatment in five of 12 patients; after treatment, the CSF was cleared in all patients. VEGF-A was detected in three patients before treatment (mean ± SD: 20 ± 11 pg/mL), and was still measurable in one of these patients despite treatment (16 pg/mL).
Conclusions
This pharmacokinetic pilot study indicated penetration of bevacizumab into the CSF in a population of children, adolescents, and young adults with recurrent brain tumors.
Journal Article
Improved Long-Term Survival of Patients with Recurrent Medulloblastoma Treated with a “MEMMAT-like” Metronomic Antiangiogenic Approach
by
Baumgartner, Alicia
,
Slavc, Irene
,
Chocholous, Monika
in
Angiogenesis
,
Angiogenesis inhibitors
,
Bevacizumab
2022
Medulloblastoma (MB) recurrence is usually incurable despite intensive therapy including high-dose chemotherapy. An evolving alternative approach to conventional chemotherapy aims at interfering with tumor angiogenesis at different levels. We report on a novel combinatorial metronomic antiangiogenic approach. The study is a retrospective observational study of 29 consecutive patients with first or multiple recurrences prospectively treated according to the MEMMAT strategy (“MEMMAT-like”) before the formal protocol (MEMMAT; ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01356290) started. The study period was 11/2006 to 06/2016. Treatment consisted of daily oral thalidomide, fenofibrate, celecoxib, and alternating 21-day cycles of low-dose oral etoposide and cyclophosphamide supplemented by IV bevacizumab and intraventricular therapy consisting of alternating etoposide and liposomal cytarabine. Median overall survival (OS) after recurrence for the whole group was 29.5 months, OS was 48.3 ± 9.3% at three years and 34.5 ± 8.8% at five years, and progression-free survival was 42.0 ± 9.5% at three years and 29.4 ± 9% at five years. As of 07/2022, 9/29 patients are alive 86 to 164 months after the recurrence that prompted the “MEMMAT-like” therapy. Treatment was primarily out-patient and generally well-tolerated. Toxicities did occur but were manageable. In conclusion, antiangiogenic therapy according to the MEMMAT strategy increased median OS of patients with recurrent MB and may lead to long-term survival. Adherence to the protocol, including intraventricular therapy, appears important.
Journal Article
Predisposition of Wingless Subgroup Medulloblastoma for Primary Tumor Hemorrhage
2020
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Primary intratumoral hemorrhage as a presenting sign is rare in children with medulloblastomas but may result in severe complications. Given the distinct properties of molecular medulloblastoma subgroups, the impact on neurosurgical practice has still to be defined.
OBJECTIVE
To investigate both clinical and radiological presentation of intratumoral hemorrhage in medulloblastoma patients in the context of molecular subgroups.
METHODS
Data of all consecutive medulloblastoma patients treated at our institution between 1993 and 2018 (n = 104) were retrospectively reviewed in respect of clinical and radiological presentation as well as molecular subgroups. For cases with available tumor tissue (n = 86), subgroups were assigned by either 450 K methylation array or immunohistochemistry and CTNNB1 sequencing. Available imaging at diagnosis (n = 62) was reviewed by an experienced neuroradiologist.
RESULTS
Within the entire cohort, 4 patients (4%) presented with massive spontaneous hemorrhage. Although no patient died as a direct consequence of hemorrhage, all suffered from serious sequelae. Moreover, 3 additional patients displayed radiological evidence of significant hemorrhage. Interestingly, all 7 cases belonged to the wingless (WNT) subgroup (n = 13), resulting in intratumoral hemorrhage in 54% (7/13) of pediatric WNT medulloblastomas. In contrast, significant hemorrhage was absent in all other molecular subgroups.
CONCLUSION
Our results suggest that a substantial proportion of pediatric WNT medulloblastomas display significant intratumoral hemorrhage at the time of diagnosis. Consequently, the presence of significant hemorrhage in fourth ventricle childhood tumors is suggestive of WNT medulloblastoma and should lead to a less aggressive attempt for total resection in this prognostically favorable tumor type.
Graphical Abstract
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Safety of Ommaya reservoirs in children with brain tumors: a 20-year experience with 5472 intraventricular drug administrations in 98 patients
by
Dorfer, Christian
,
Slavc, Irene
,
Chocholous, Monika
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols - therapeutic use
2014
The Ommaya reservoir facilitates repetitive delivery of drugs into the CSF and is a pharmacologically rational system for intrathecal chemotherapy. Because previous studies have found a high rate of infection and other complications we herein studied our experience with this device. Between 1993 and 2013, 98 children with brain tumors aged 3 months to 21 years (38 ≤ 3 years) had an Ommaya reservoir placed. All patients received perioperative antibiotics. Only specially trained personnel that followed standardized guidelines were allowed to access the reservoir. As of April 2014, 5,472 chemotherapy instillations were performed amounting to a median of 36 deliveries (2–280) per reservoir. Ommaya reservoirs were present for 199,956 days and a median of 1,336 days per device. Median survival of the 52 patients still alive is 7.5 years. Only one patient developed an Ommaya reservoir infection (1 %) that could be temporarily sterilized but eventually required Ommaya reservoir explantation. Early complications related to Ommaya reservoir placement occurred in two patients, in one catheter malposition was corrected intraoperatively and in the other kinking of the catheter at the burr-hole required minor surgical correction. Two delayed complications requiring surgical revision included malpositioning of the catheter tip after rapid shrinkage of the ventricles and disconnection of the ventricular catheter after 24 accesses. No leucodystrophic changes occurred along the catheter track. In conclusion, Ommaya reservoirs are safe and complications infrequent providing that all personnel involved in implanting and subsequently accessing the device are specially trained and pay meticulous attention to strict aseptic conditions.
Journal Article
High-sensitivity microsatellite instability assessment for the detection of mismatch repair defects in normal tissue of biallelic germline mismatch repair mutation carriers
2020
IntroductionLynch syndrome (LS) and constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) are hereditary cancer syndromes associated with mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency. Tumours show microsatellite instability (MSI), also reported at low levels in non-neoplastic tissues. Our aim was to evaluate the performance of high-sensitivity MSI (hs-MSI) assessment for the identification of LS and CMMRD in non-neoplastic tissues.Materials and methodsBlood DNA samples from 131 individuals were grouped into three cohorts: baseline (22 controls), training (11 CMMRD, 48 LS and 15 controls) and validation (18 CMMRD and 18 controls). Custom next generation sequencing panel and bioinformatics pipeline were used to detect insertions and deletions in microsatellite markers. An hs-MSI score was calculated representing the percentage of unstable markers.ResultsThe hs-MSI score was significantly higher in CMMRD blood samples when compared with controls in the training cohort (p<0.001). This finding was confirmed in the validation set, reaching 100% specificity and sensitivity. Higher hs-MSI scores were detected in biallelic MSH2 carriers (n=5) compared with MSH6 carriers (n=15). The hs-MSI analysis did not detect a difference between LS and control blood samples (p=0.564).ConclusionsThe hs-MSI approach is a valuable tool for CMMRD diagnosis, especially in suspected patients harbouring MMR variants of unknown significance or non-detected biallelic germline mutations.
Journal Article
Infiltrative gliomas of the thalamus in children: the role of surgery in the era of H3 K27M mutant midline gliomas
2021
Background
The role of surgery in the management of pediatric non-pilocytic infiltrative thalamic gliomas needs to be revisited specifically with regard to molecularly defined subtypes.
Methods
A retrospective review of a consecutive series of children operated on a thalamic tumor between 1992 and May 2018 was performed. Neuroimaging data were reviewed for localization and extent of resection; pathology was re-reviewed according to the current WHO classification, including assessment of histone H3 K27 mutational status.
Results
Forty-nine patients with a thalamic tumor aged < 18 years at diagnosis were identified. Twenty-five patients (51%) had a non-pilocytic infiltrative glioma, of which the H3 K27M status was available in 22. Fourteen patients were diagnosed as
diffuse midline glioma (DMG) H3 K27M mutant
. There was no statistically significant difference in survival between patients harboring the H3 K27M mutation and wildtype. Resection (“any resection > 50%” vs “biopsy”) and histological tumor grade (“°II” vs “°III+°IV”) were statistically significant predictors of survival (univariate: p = 0.044 and p = 0.013, respectively). These results remained significant on multivariate analysis (HR 0.371/
p
= 0.048, HR 9.433/
p
= 0.035).
Conclusion
We advocate to still consider an attempt at maximal safe resection in the multidisciplinary treatment of unilateral thalamic non-pilocytic gliomas irrespective of their H3 K27-mutational status.
Journal Article