Germline ALK variations are associated with a poor prognosis in glioma and IDH-wildtype glioblastoma.
By: Linghao Bu, N U Farrukh Hameed, Chen Luo, Pengjie Hong, Xiaoyu Zhou, Shengzhou Wang, Shuai Wu

Department of Neurosurgery, Huashan Hospital, Shanghai Medical College, Fudan University, Shanghai, China.
2020-10-07; doi: 10.1007/s11060-020-03676-5
Abstract

Background

Glioma is the most common primary brain tumor. Clear classification is crucial for accurate diagnosis and individualized treatment. Histopathological characteristics and genetic alterations have shown to be related to prognosis and treatment response. Germline variants are important components of genetic alterations. However, the distribution of germline variations in glioma patients and their association with survival remain unknown.

Methods

We carried out whole-exome sequencing on 99 cases to explore germline variants in glioma. We also analyzed the association of germline variants with clinicopathological features and other prognostic indicators.

Results

All the glioma cases harbored rare germline variants. Germline ALK variants (gALK-Mut) were identified in 12/99 (12.12%) patients. The gALK-Mut patients had significantly shorter overall survival than germline ALK wildtype (gALK-WT) patients in the all glioma group (99 cases) and the subset of patients with IDH-wildtype glioblastoma (IDH-WT-GBM, 39 cases) (P = 0.013 and 0.027, respectively). The gALK-Mut patients also had higher frequency of BIRC5, PIK3CA and RPN1 somatic mutations than the gALK-WT patients in IDH-WT-GBM. Other confounding factors appeared to contribute to patient survival. The subgroup of patients in IDH-WT-GBM with gALK-Mut/TP53-Mut had worse prognosis than the gALK-WT/TP53-Mut subgroup (P = 0.031); The gALK-Mut/TERT-WT and gALK-Mut/TERT-Mut subgroups both had a worse prognosis than the gALK-WT/TERT-Mut subgroup (P = 0.031 and 0.018, respectively).

Conclusions

Our study revealed ALK variation was an independent indicator of poor prognosis in glioma and IDH-WT-GBM. It could be a promising biomarker and tractable therapeutic target for this deadly disease.





PMID:33486679






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