Acta Neuropathologica Communications (Dec 2021)

IDH-wild type glioblastomas featuring at least 30% giant cells are characterized by frequent RB1 and NF1 alterations and hypermutation

  • Valeria Barresi,
  • Michele Simbolo,
  • Andrea Mafficini,
  • Maurizio Martini,
  • Martina Calicchia,
  • Maria Liliana Piredda,
  • Chiara Ciaparrone,
  • Giada Bonizzato,
  • Serena Ammendola,
  • Maria Caffo,
  • Giampietro Pinna,
  • Francesco Sala,
  • Rita Teresa Lawlor,
  • Claudio Ghimenton,
  • Aldo Scarpa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40478-021-01304-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Giant cell glioblastoma (GC-GBM) is a rare variant of IDH-wt GBM histologically characterized by the presence of numerous multinucleated giant cells and molecularly considered a hybrid between IDH-wt and IDH-mutant GBM. The lack of an objective definition, specifying the percentage of giant cells required for this diagnosis, may account for the absence of a definite molecular profile of this variant. This study aimed to clarify the molecular landscape of GC-GBM, exploring the mutations and copy number variations of 458 cancer-related genes, tumor mutational burden (TMB), and microsatellite instability (MSI) in 39 GBMs dichotomized into having 30–49% (15 cases) or ≥ 50% (24 cases) GCs. The type and prevalence of the genetic alterations in this series was not associated with the GCs content ( 10 mut/Mb, including two (5%) that harbored MSI and one with a POLE mutation. The frequency of RB1 and NF1 alterations and TMB counts were significantly higher compared to 567 IDH wild type (P < 0.0001; P = 0.0003; P < 0.0001) and 26 IDH-mutant (P < 0.0001; P = 0.0227; P < 0.0001) GBMs in the TCGA PanCancer Atlas cohort. These findings demonstrate that the molecular landscape of GBMs with at least 30% giant cells is dominated by the impairment of TP53/MDM2 and PTEN/PI3K pathways, and additionally characterized by frequent RB1 alterations and hypermutation and by EGFR amplification in more aggressive cases. The high frequency of hypermutated cases suggests that GC-GBMs might be candidates for immune check-point inhibitors clinical trials.

Keywords