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Pilocytic astrocytoma: The paradigmatic entity in low­grade gliomas (Review).
Pizzimenti, Cristina; Fiorentino, Vincenzo; Germanò, Antonino; Martini, Maurizio; Ieni, Antonio; Tuccari, Giovanni.
Afiliación
  • Pizzimenti C; Department of Biomedical, Dental, Morphological and Functional Imaging Sciences, Sections of Pathology and Neurosurgery, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
  • Fiorentino V; Department of Human Pathology in Adult and Developmental Age 'Gaetano Barresi', Section of Pathology, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
  • Germanò A; Department of Biomedical, Dental, Morphological and Functional Imaging Sciences, Sections of Pathology and Neurosurgery, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
  • Martini M; Department of Human Pathology in Adult and Developmental Age 'Gaetano Barresi', Section of Pathology, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
  • Ieni A; Department of Human Pathology in Adult and Developmental Age 'Gaetano Barresi', Section of Pathology, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
  • Tuccari G; Department of Human Pathology in Adult and Developmental Age 'Gaetano Barresi', Section of Pathology, University of Messina, I-98125 Messina, Italy.
Oncol Lett ; 27(4): 146, 2024 Apr.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38385109
ABSTRACT
Among low-grade gliomas, representing 10-20% of all primary brain tumours, the paradigmatic entity is constituted by pilocytic astrocytoma (PA), considered a grade 1 tumour by the World Health Organization. Generally, this tumour requires surgical treatment with an infrequent progression towards malignant gliomas. The present review focuses on clinicopathological characteristics, and reports imaging, neurosurgical and molecular features using a multidisciplinary approach. Macroscopically, PA is a slow-growing soft grey tissue, characteristically presenting in association with a cyst and forming a small mural nodule, typically located in the cerebellum, but sometimes occurring in the spinal cord, basal ganglia or cerebral hemisphere. Microscopically, it may appear as densely fibrillated areas composed of elongated pilocytic cells with bipolar 'hairlike' processes or densely fibrillated areas composed of elongated pilocytic cells with Rosenthal fibres alternating with loosely fibrillated areas with a varied degree of myxoid component. A wide range of molecular alterations have been encountered in PA, mostly affecting the MAPK signalling pathway. In detail, the most frequent alteration is a rearrangement of the BRAF gene, although other alterations include neurofibromatosis type-1 mutations, BRAFV600E mutations, KRAS mutations, fibroblast growth factor receptor-1 mutations of fusions, neurotrophic receptor tyrosine kinase family receptor tyrosine kinase fusions and RAF1 gene fusions. The gold standard of PA treatment is surgical excision with complete margin resection, achieving minimal neurological damage. Conventional radiotherapy is not required; the more appropriate treatment appears to be serial follow-up. Chemotherapy should only be applied in younger children to avoid the risk of long-term growth and developmental issues associated with radiation. Finally, if PA recurs, a new surgical approach should be performed. At present, novel therapy involving agents targeting MAPK signalling pathway dysregulation is in development, defining BRAF and MEK inhibitors as target therapeutical agents.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Contexto en salud: 2_ODS3 Problema de salud: 2_cobertura_universal Idioma: En Revista: Oncol Lett Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Italia

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Base de datos: MEDLINE Contexto en salud: 2_ODS3 Problema de salud: 2_cobertura_universal Idioma: En Revista: Oncol Lett Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Italia
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