Free Neuropathology (May 2024)

Malignant glioma in L-2-Hydroxy Glutaric Aciduria: thorough molecular characterization of a case and literature review

  • Fleur Cordier,
  • Pieter Wesseling,
  • Bastiaan B.J. Tops,
  • Lennart Kester,
  • Pim J. French,
  • Martin van den Bent,
  • Felix Hinz,
  • Eleonora Aronica,
  • K. Mariam Slot,
  • Floor Abbink,
  • Marjo S. van der Knaap,
  • Mariette Kranendonk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17879/freeneuropathology-2024-5377
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria (L-2-HGA) is a rare neurometabolic disorder characterized by accumulation of L2-hydroxyglutarate (L-2-HG) due to mutations in the L2HGDH gene. L-2-HGA patients have a significantly increased lifetime risk of central nervous system (CNS) tumors. Here, we present a 16-year-old girl with L-2-HGA who developed a tumor in the right cerebral hemisphere, which was discovered after left-sided neurological deficits of the patient. Histologically, the tumor had a high-grade diffuse glioma phenotype. DNA sequencing revealed the inactivating homozygous germline L2HGDH mutation as well as inactivating mutations in TP53, BCOR and NF1. Genome-wide DNA-methylation analysis was unable to classify the tumor with high confidence. More detailed analysis revealed that this tumor clustered amongst IDH-wildtype gliomas by methylation profiling and did not show the glioma CpG island methylator phenotype (G-CIMP) in contrast to IDH-mutant diffuse gliomas with accumulated levels of D-2-HG, the stereoisomer of L-2-HD. These findings were against all our expectations given the inhibitory potential of 2-HG on DNA-demethylation enzymes. Our final integrated histomolecular diagnosis of the tumor was diffuse pediatric-type high-grade glioma, H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype. Due to rapid tumor progression the patient died nine months after initial diagnosis. In this manuscript, we provide extensive molecular characterization of the tumor as well as a literature review focusing on oncogenetic considerations of L-2-HGA-associated CNS tumors.

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