Beta-catenin Status in P?aediatric Medulloblastomas: correlation of immunohistochemical expression with mutational status, genetic profiles, and clinical characteristics.


Autoria(s): Fattet S.; Haberler C.; Legoix P.; Varlet P.; Lellouch-Tubiana A.; Lair S.; Manie E.; Raquin M.A.; Bours D.; Carpentier S.; Barillot E.; Grill J.; Doz F.; Puget S.; Janoueix-Lerosey I.; Delattre O.
Data(s)

2009

Resumo

Medulloblastoma is the most frequent malignant paediatric brain tumour. The activation of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway occurs in 10-15% of medulloblastomas and has been recently described as a marker for favourable patient outcome. We report a series of 72 paediatric medulloblastomas evaluated for beta-catenin protein expression, CTNNB1 mutations, and comparative genomic hybridization. Gene expression profiles were also available in a subset of 40 cases. Immunostaining of beta-catenin showed extensive nuclear staining (>50% of the tumour cells) in six cases and focal nuclear staining (<10% of cells) in three cases. The other cases either exhibited a signal strictly limited to the cytoplasm (58 cases) or were negative (five cases). CTNNB1 mutations were detected in all beta-catenin extensively nucleopositive cases. The expression profiles of these cases documented strong activation of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway. Remarkably, five out of these six tumours showed a complete loss of chromosome 6. In contrast, cases with focal nuclear beta-catenin staining, as well as tumours with negative or cytoplasmic staining, never demonstrated CTNNB1 mutation, Wnt/beta-catenin pathway activation or chromosome 6 loss. Patients with extensive nuclear staining were significantly older at diagnosis and were in continuous complete remission after a mean follow-up of 75.7 months (range 27.5-121.2 months) from diagnosis. All three patients with focal nuclear staining of beta-catenin died within 36 months from diagnosis. Altogether, these data confirm and extend previous observations that CTNNB1-mutated tumours represent a distinct molecular subgroup of medulloblastomas with favourable outcome, indicating that therapy de-escalation should be considered. International consensus on the definition criteria of this distinct medulloblastoma subgroup should be achieved.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_E5896072DBAD

isbn:1096-9896[electronic]

pmid:19197950

doi:10.1002/path.2514

isiid:000265546200009

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

The Journal of pathology, vol. 218, no. 1, pp. 86-94

Palavras-Chave #Adolescent; Child; Child, Preschool; Comparative Genomic Hybridization; DNA Mutational Analysis; Female; Gene Expression Profiling/methods; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Infant; Male; Medulloblastoma/genetics; Medulloblastoma/metabolism; Mutation; Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis; Survival Rate; beta Catenin/analysis; beta Catenin/genetics
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article