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Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease

Background: Meningiomas are common intracranial tumors with variable prognoses not entirely captured by commonly used classification schemes. We sought to determine the relationship between meningioma mutations and oncologic outcomes using a targeted next-generation sequencing panel. Materials and M...

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Autores principales: Dullea, Jonathan T., Vasan, Vikram, Rutland, John W., Gill, Corey M., Chaluts, Danielle, Ranti, Daniel, Ellis, Ethan, Subramanium, Varun, Arrighi-Allisan, Annie, Kinoshita, Yayoi, McBride, Russell B., Bederson, Joshua, Donovan, Michael, Sebra, Robert, Umphlett, Melissa, Shrivastava, Raj K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9733702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36514795
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncoscience.570
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author Dullea, Jonathan T.
Vasan, Vikram
Rutland, John W.
Gill, Corey M.
Chaluts, Danielle
Ranti, Daniel
Ellis, Ethan
Subramanium, Varun
Arrighi-Allisan, Annie
Kinoshita, Yayoi
McBride, Russell B.
Bederson, Joshua
Donovan, Michael
Sebra, Robert
Umphlett, Melissa
Shrivastava, Raj K.
author_facet Dullea, Jonathan T.
Vasan, Vikram
Rutland, John W.
Gill, Corey M.
Chaluts, Danielle
Ranti, Daniel
Ellis, Ethan
Subramanium, Varun
Arrighi-Allisan, Annie
Kinoshita, Yayoi
McBride, Russell B.
Bederson, Joshua
Donovan, Michael
Sebra, Robert
Umphlett, Melissa
Shrivastava, Raj K.
author_sort Dullea, Jonathan T.
collection PubMed
description Background: Meningiomas are common intracranial tumors with variable prognoses not entirely captured by commonly used classification schemes. We sought to determine the relationship between meningioma mutations and oncologic outcomes using a targeted next-generation sequencing panel. Materials and Methods: We identified 184 grade I and II meningiomas with both >90 days of post-surgical follow-up and linked targeted next-generation sequencing. For mutated genes in greater than 5% of the sample, we computed progression-free survival Cox-regression models stratified by gene. We then built a multi-gene model by including all gene predictors with a p-value of less than 0.20. Starting with that model, we performed backward selection to identify the most predictive factors. Results: ATM (HR = 4.448; 95% CI: 1.517–13.046), CREBBP (HR = 2.727; 95% CI = 1.163–6.396), and POLE (HR = 0.544; HR = 0.311–0.952) were significantly associated with alterations in disease progression after adjusting for clinical and pathologic factors. In the multi-gene model, only POLE remained a significant predictor of recurrence after adjusting for the same clinical covariates. Backwards selection identified recurrence status, resection extent, and mutations in ATM (HR = 7.333; 95% CI = 2.318–23.195) and POLE (HR = 0.413; 95% CI = 0.229–0.743) as predictive of recurrence. Conclusions: Mutations in ATM and CREBBP were associated with accelerated meningioma recurrence, and mutations in POLE were protective of recurrence. Each mutation has potential implications for treatment. The effect of these mutations on oncologic outcomes and as potential targets for intervention warrants future study.
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spelling pubmed-97337022022-12-12 Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease Dullea, Jonathan T. Vasan, Vikram Rutland, John W. Gill, Corey M. Chaluts, Danielle Ranti, Daniel Ellis, Ethan Subramanium, Varun Arrighi-Allisan, Annie Kinoshita, Yayoi McBride, Russell B. Bederson, Joshua Donovan, Michael Sebra, Robert Umphlett, Melissa Shrivastava, Raj K. Oncoscience Research Paper Background: Meningiomas are common intracranial tumors with variable prognoses not entirely captured by commonly used classification schemes. We sought to determine the relationship between meningioma mutations and oncologic outcomes using a targeted next-generation sequencing panel. Materials and Methods: We identified 184 grade I and II meningiomas with both >90 days of post-surgical follow-up and linked targeted next-generation sequencing. For mutated genes in greater than 5% of the sample, we computed progression-free survival Cox-regression models stratified by gene. We then built a multi-gene model by including all gene predictors with a p-value of less than 0.20. Starting with that model, we performed backward selection to identify the most predictive factors. Results: ATM (HR = 4.448; 95% CI: 1.517–13.046), CREBBP (HR = 2.727; 95% CI = 1.163–6.396), and POLE (HR = 0.544; HR = 0.311–0.952) were significantly associated with alterations in disease progression after adjusting for clinical and pathologic factors. In the multi-gene model, only POLE remained a significant predictor of recurrence after adjusting for the same clinical covariates. Backwards selection identified recurrence status, resection extent, and mutations in ATM (HR = 7.333; 95% CI = 2.318–23.195) and POLE (HR = 0.413; 95% CI = 0.229–0.743) as predictive of recurrence. Conclusions: Mutations in ATM and CREBBP were associated with accelerated meningioma recurrence, and mutations in POLE were protective of recurrence. Each mutation has potential implications for treatment. The effect of these mutations on oncologic outcomes and as potential targets for intervention warrants future study. Impact Journals LLC 2022-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9733702/ /pubmed/36514795 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncoscience.570 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Copyright: © 2022 Dullea et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Dullea, Jonathan T.
Vasan, Vikram
Rutland, John W.
Gill, Corey M.
Chaluts, Danielle
Ranti, Daniel
Ellis, Ethan
Subramanium, Varun
Arrighi-Allisan, Annie
Kinoshita, Yayoi
McBride, Russell B.
Bederson, Joshua
Donovan, Michael
Sebra, Robert
Umphlett, Melissa
Shrivastava, Raj K.
Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title_full Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title_fullStr Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title_full_unstemmed Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title_short Association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in Grade I/II disease
title_sort association between tumor mutations and meningioma recurrence in grade i/ii disease
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9733702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36514795
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncoscience.570
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