Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Clin Cancer Res. 2019 Apr 15;25(8):2656-2663. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-18-3101. Epub 2019 Jan 11.
The integrated histopathologic and molecular diagnoses of the 2016 WHO classification of central nervous system tumors have revolutionized patient care by improving diagnostic accuracy and reproducibility; however, the frequency and consequences of misclassification of histologically diagnosed diffuse gliomas are unknown.
Patients with newly diagnosed ICD-O-3 (International Classification of Diseases) histologically encoded diffuse gliomas from 2010-2015 were identified from the National Cancer Database, the misclassification rates and overall survival (OS) of which were assessed by WHO grade and 1p/19q status. In addition, misclassification rates by isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH), ATRX, and p53 statuses were examined in an analogous multi-institutional cohort of registry-encoded diffuse gliomas.
Of 74,718 patients with diffuse glioma, only 74.4% and 78.8% of molecularly characterized WHO grade II and III oligodendrogliomas were in fact 1p/19q-codeleted. In addition, 28.9% and 36.8% of histologically encoded grade II and III "oligoastrocytomas", and 6.3% and 8.8% of grade II and III astrocytomas had 1p/19q-codeletion, thus molecularly representing oligodendrogliomas if also IDH mutant. OS significantly depended on accurate WHO grading and 1p/19q status.
On the basis of 1p/19q, IDH, ATRX, and p53, the misclassification rates of histologically encoded oligodendrogliomas, astrocytomas, and glioblastomas are approximately 21%-35%, 6%-9%, and 9%, respectively; with significant clinical implications. Our findings suggest that when compared with historical histology-only classified data, in national registry, as well as, institutional databases, there is the potential for false-positive results in contemporary trials of molecularly classified diffuse gliomas, which could contribute to a seemingly positive phase II trial (based on historical comparison) failing at the phase III stage. Critically, findings from diffuse glioma clinical trials and historical cohorts using prior histology-only WHO schemes must be cautiously reinterpreted.
2016 年世界卫生组织(WHO)中枢神经系统肿瘤分类的综合组织病理学和分子诊断通过提高诊断准确性和可重复性彻底改变了患者的治疗方式;然而,组织学诊断弥漫性神经胶质瘤的分类错误的频率和后果尚不清楚。
从国家癌症数据库中确定了 2010-2015 年间新诊断为 ICD-O-3(国际疾病分类)组织学编码弥漫性神经胶质瘤的患者,根据 WHO 分级和 1p/19q 状态评估了其分类错误率和总生存率(OS)。此外,还在一个类似的多机构登记处编码弥漫性神经胶质瘤的队列中检查了异柠檬酸脱氢酶(IDH)、ATRX 和 p53 状态的分类错误率。
在 74718 例弥漫性神经胶质瘤患者中,实际上只有 74.4%和 78.8%的分子特征为 WHO 分级 II 和 III 少突胶质细胞瘤为 1p/19q 缺失。此外,28.9%和 36.8%的组织学编码的 II 级和 III 级“少突星形细胞瘤”,以及 6.3%和 8.8%的 II 级和 III 级星形细胞瘤具有 1p/19q 缺失,因此如果也是 IDH 突变,则在分子上代表少突胶质细胞瘤。OS 显著取决于准确的 WHO 分级和 1p/19q 状态。
基于 1p/19q、IDH、ATRX 和 p53,组织学编码的少突胶质细胞瘤、星形细胞瘤和胶质母细胞瘤的分类错误率分别约为 21%-35%、6%-9%和 9%;具有显著的临床意义。我们的研究结果表明,与仅基于历史组织学分类的历史数据相比,在国家登记处以及机构数据库中,在当代分子分类弥漫性神经胶质瘤的临床试验中,可能会出现假阳性结果,这可能导致看似阳性的 II 期临床试验(基于历史比较)在 III 期阶段失败。至关重要的是,必须谨慎重新解释使用先前仅基于组织学的 WHO 方案的弥漫性神经胶质瘤临床试验和历史队列的结果。