Life Sciences

The pontine diffuse midline glioma, EGFR ‐subtype with ependymal features: Yet another face of diffuse midline glioma, H3K27‐altered

Published on - Brain Pathology

Authors: Arnault Tauziède-Espariat, Alice Métais, Cassandra Mariet, David Castel, Jacques Grill, Raphaël Saffroy, Lauren Hasty, Volodia Dangouloff-Ros, Nathalie Boddaert, Sandro Benichi, Fabrice Chrétien, Pascale Varlet

Abstract Recent epigenomic analyses have revealed the existence of a new DNA methylation class (MC) of infant‐type hemispheric glioma (IHG). Like desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma/astrocytoma (DIG/DIA), these tumors mainly affect infants and are supratentorial. While DIG/DIA is characterized by BRAF or RAF1 alterations, IHG has been shown to have receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) gene fusions ( ALK , ROS1 , NTRK1/2/3 , and MET ). However, in this rapidly evolving field, a more comprehensive analysis of infantile glial/glioneuronal tumors including clinical, radiological, histopathological, and molecular data is needed. Here, we retrospectively investigated data from 30 infantile glial/glioneuronal tumors, consecutively compiled from our center. They were analyzed by two experienced pediatric neuroradiologists in consensus, without former knowledge of the molecular data. We also performed a comprehensive clinical, and histopathological examination (including molecular evaluation by next‐generation sequencing, RNA sequencing, and fluorescence in situ hybridization [FISH] analyses), as well as DNA methylation profiling for the samples having sufficient material available. The integrative histopathological, genetic, and epigenetic analyses, including t‐distributed stochastic neighbor embedding (t‐SNE) analyses segregated tumors into 10 DIG/DIA (33.3%), six IHG (20.0%), three gangliogliomas (10.0%), two pleomorphic xanthoastrocytomas (6.7%), two pilocytic astrocytomas (6.7%), two supratentorial ependymomas, ZFTA fusion‐positive (6.7%), two supratentorial ependymomas, YAP1 fusion‐positive (6.7%), two embryonal tumors with PLAGL2‐family amplification (6.7%), and one diffuse low‐grade glioma, MAPK‐pathway altered. This study highlights the significant differential features, in terms of histopathology (leptomeningeal infiltration, intense desmoplasia and ganglion cells in DIG/DIA and necrosis, microvascular proliferation, and siderophages in IHG), and radiology between DIG/DIA and IHG. Moreover, these results are consistent with the literature data concerning the molecular dichotomy ( BRAF/RAF1 alterations vs. RTK genes' fusions) between DIG/DIA and IHG. This study characterized histopathologically and radiologically two additional cases of the novel embryonal tumor characterized by PLAGL2 gene amplification.