Dominik Sturm, Stefan M. Pfister, and David T.W. Jones, German Cancer Research Center; Hopp-Children's Cancer Center at the National Center for Tumor Diseases Heidelberg; German Consortium for Translational Cancer Research; and Dominik Sturm and Stefan M. Pfister, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany.
J Clin Oncol. 2017 Jul 20;35(21):2370-2377. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2017.73.0242. Epub 2017 Jun 22.
Gliomas are the most common CNS tumors in children and adolescents, and they show an extremely broad range of clinical behavior. The majority of pediatric gliomas present as benign, slow-growing lesions classified as grade I or II by the WHO classification of CNS tumors. These pediatric low-grade gliomas (LGGs) are fundamentally different from IDH-mutant LGGs occurring in adults, because they rarely undergo malignant transformation and show excellent overall survival under current treatment strategies. However, a significant fraction of gliomas develop over a short period of time and progress rapidly and are therefore classified as WHO grade III or IV high-grade gliomas (HGGs). Despite all therapeutic efforts, they remain largely incurable, with the most aggressive forms being lethal within months. Thus, the intentions of neurosurgeons, pediatric oncologists, and radiotherapists to improve care for pediatric patients with glioma range from increasing quality of life and preventing long-term sequelae in what is often a chronic, but rarely life-threatening disease (LGG), to uncovering effective treatment options to prolong patient survival in an almost universally fatal setting (HGG). The last decade has seen unprecedented progress in understanding the molecular biology underlying pediatric gliomas, fueling hopes to achieve both goals. Large-scale collaborative studies around the globe have cataloged genomic and epigenomic alterations in gliomas across ages, grades, and histologies. These studies have revealed biologic subgroups characterized by distinct molecular, pathologic, and clinical features, with clear relevance for patient management. In this review, we summarize hallmark discoveries that have expanded our knowledge in pediatric LGGs and HGGs, explain their role in tumor biology, and convey our current concepts on how these findings may be translated into novel therapeutic approaches.
神经胶质瘤是儿童和青少年中枢神经系统肿瘤中最常见的一种,其临床表现极为广泛。大多数儿童神经胶质瘤呈良性、生长缓慢的病变,根据世界卫生组织中枢神经系统肿瘤分类标准,这些病变被归类为 I 级或 II 级。这些儿童低级别神经胶质瘤(LGG)与成人中发生的 IDH 突变型 LGG 有很大的不同,因为它们很少发生恶性转化,并且在当前的治疗策略下表现出极好的总体生存率。然而,相当一部分神经胶质瘤在短时间内迅速发展,并迅速进展,因此被归类为世界卫生组织(WHO)III 级或 IV 级高级别神经胶质瘤(HGG)。尽管进行了所有的治疗努力,但它们仍然在很大程度上无法治愈,最具侵袭性的形式在几个月内就会致命。因此,神经外科医生、儿科肿瘤学家和放射治疗师的意图是改善对患有神经胶质瘤的儿科患者的护理,从提高生活质量和预防长期后遗症(通常是慢性但很少危及生命的疾病(LGG)),到发现有效的治疗方案来延长几乎普遍致命情况下的患者生存时间(HGG)。过去十年中,在理解儿童神经胶质瘤的分子生物学方面取得了前所未有的进展,这为实现这两个目标带来了希望。全球范围内的大型合作研究已经对不同年龄、不同级别和不同组织学的神经胶质瘤进行了基因组和表观基因组改变的编目。这些研究揭示了具有不同分子、病理和临床特征的生物学亚群,这些亚群与患者管理密切相关。在这篇综述中,我们总结了扩大我们对儿童低级别神经胶质瘤和高级别神经胶质瘤认识的标志性发现,解释了它们在肿瘤生物学中的作用,并传达了我们目前对这些发现如何转化为新的治疗方法的概念。