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BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma cells preferentially use de-novo purine synthesis pathway, whereas normal brain prefers salvage pathway. Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), a commonly used oral immunosuppressant that inhibits inosine-5'-monophosphate dehydrogenase (IMPDH), a key enzyme in the de-novo purine pathway. Pre-clinical suggested MMF can improve radiation and temozolomide efficacy in glioblastoma which led to this phase 0/1 trial (NCT04477200) to assess MMF's tolerability with chemoradiation in glioblastoma, mycophenolic acid accumulation, and purine synthesis inhibition in tumor. METHODS: In the phase 0 study, eight recurrent glioblastoma patients received MMF at doses ranging 500-2,000 mg BID for 1-week before surgery. The tissues were analyzed using mass spectrometry for drug accumulation and purine synthesis inhibition. In the phase 1 study, adult patients were given MMF starting at 1,000 mg orally (PO) twice daily (BID), with the possible dose ranging 500-2,000 PO BID. Nineteen recurrent glioblastoma patients (target N=30) received MMF 1-week prior to and concurrently with re-irradiation (40.5 Gy). Thirty newly diagnosed glioblastoma patients received MMF 1-week prior to and concurrently with chemoradiation, followed by MMF 1-day before and during 5 days of each adjuvant temozolomide cycle. RESULTS: Both enhancing and non-enhancing tumors from phase 0 subjects yielded >1 µM active drug metabolite, and the guanosine triphosphate: inosine monophosphate ratio was decreased by 75% in enhancing tumors in MMF-treated patients compared to untreated controls (P=0.009), indicating effective target engagement and inhibition of purine synthesis. In the phase 1 study, no dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) were observed at the interim analysis at MMF 1,000-1,500 mg BID combined with chemoradiation. At 2,000 mg BID, there was no DLT combined with temozolomide alone, however, there were four DLTs noted (hemiparesis, cognitive disturbance, fatigue, thrombocytopenia) when combined with radiotherapy and temozolomide together, though all were reversible. Interim median overall survival in recurrent phase 1 is 15.6 months, and not reached yet in newly diagnosed phase 1. CONCLUSIONS: MMF with chemoradiation has been reasonably well tolerated and showed promising evidence of brain tumor target engagement and drug accumulation. This study led to a recommended phase 2 dose of MMF 1,500 mg BID and will provide a preliminary efficacy estimate for a randomized phase 2/3 trial through the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology.
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Quimiorradioterapia , Glioblastoma , Purinas , Humanos , Glioblastoma/tratamento farmacológico , Masculino , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Adulto , Quimiorradioterapia/métodos , Purinas/farmacologia , Purinas/uso terapêutico , Idoso , Recidiva Local de Neoplasia , Neoplasias Encefálicas/tratamento farmacológicoRESUMO
How cell metabolism regulates DNA repair is incompletely understood. Here, we define a GTP-mediated signaling cascade that links metabolism to DNA repair and has significant therapeutic implications. GTP, but not other nucleotides, regulates the activity of Rac1, a guanine nucleotide-binding protein, which promotes the dephosphorylation of serine 323 on Abl-interactor 1 (Abi-1) by protein phosphatase 5 (PP5). Dephosphorylated Abi-1, a protein previously not known to activate DNA repair, promotes nonhomologous end joining. In patients and mouse models of glioblastoma, Rac1 and dephosphorylated Abi-1 mediate DNA repair and resistance to standard-of-care genotoxic treatments. The GTP-Rac1-PP5-Abi-1 signaling axis is not limited to brain cancer, as GTP supplementation promotes DNA repair and Abi-1-S323 dephosphorylation in nonmalignant cells and protects mouse tissues from genotoxic insult. This unexpected ability of GTP to regulate DNA repair independently of deoxynucleotide pools has important implications for normal physiology and cancer treatment. SIGNIFICANCE: A newly described GTP-dependent signaling axis is an unexpected link between nucleotide metabolism and DNA repair. Disrupting this pathway can overcome cancer resistance to genotoxic therapy while augmenting it can mitigate genotoxic injury of normal tissues. This article is featured in Selected Articles from This Issue, p. 5.
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Glioblastoma , Transdução de Sinais , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Transdução de Sinais/genética , Reparo do DNA , Dano ao DNA , Guanosina TrifosfatoRESUMO
Recent clinical trials for H3K27-altered diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs) have shown much promise. We present a consensus roadmap and identify three major barriers: (1) refinement of experimental models to include immune and brain-specific components; (2) collaboration among researchers, clinicians, and industry to integrate patient-derived data through sharing, transparency, and regulatory considerations; and (3) streamlining clinical efforts including biopsy, CNS-drug delivery, endpoint determination, and response monitoring. We highlight the importance of comprehensive collaboration to advance the understanding, diagnostics, and therapeutics for DMGs.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioma , Humanos , Criança , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/terapia , Glioma/diagnóstico , Glioma/genética , Glioma/terapia , Mutação , Encéfalo/patologia , BiópsiaRESUMO
The brain avidly consumes glucose to fuel neurophysiology. Cancers of the brain, such as glioblastoma (GBM), lose aspects of normal biology and gain the ability to proliferate and invade healthy tissue. How brain cancers rewire glucose utilization to fuel these processes is poorly understood. Here we perform infusions of 13 C-labeled glucose into patients and mice with brain cancer to define the metabolic fates of glucose-derived carbon in tumor and cortex. By combining these measurements with quantitative metabolic flux analysis, we find that human cortex funnels glucose-derived carbons towards physiologic processes including TCA cycle oxidation and neurotransmitter synthesis. In contrast, brain cancers downregulate these physiologic processes, scavenge alternative carbon sources from the environment, and instead use glucose-derived carbons to produce molecules needed for proliferation and invasion. Targeting this metabolic rewiring in mice through dietary modulation selectively alters GBM metabolism and slows tumor growth. Significance: This study is the first to directly measure biosynthetic flux in both glioma and cortical tissue in human brain cancer patients. Brain tumors rewire glucose carbon utilization away from oxidation and neurotransmitter production towards biosynthesis to fuel growth. Blocking these metabolic adaptations with dietary interventions slows brain cancer growth with minimal effects on cortical metabolism.
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BACKGROUND: High-grade gliomas have a poor prognosis and do not respond well to treatment. Effective cancer immune responses depend on functional immune cells, which are typically absent from the brain. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and activity of two adenoviral vectors expressing HSV1-TK (Ad-hCMV-TK) and Flt3L (Ad-hCMV-Flt3L) in patients with high-grade glioma. METHODS: In this dose-finding, first-in-human trial, treatment-naive adults aged 18-75 years with newly identified high-grade glioma that was evaluated per immunotherapy response assessment in neuro-oncology criteria, and a Karnofsky Performance Status score of 70 or more, underwent maximal safe resection followed by injections of adenoviral vectors expressing HSV1-TK and Flt3L into the tumour bed. The study was conducted at the University of Michigan Medical School, Michigan Medicine (Ann Arbor, MI, USA). The study included six escalating doses of viral particles with starting doses of 1×1010 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×109 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort A), and then 1×1011 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×109 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort B), 1×1010 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×1010 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort C), 1×1011 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×1010 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort D), 1×1010 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×1011 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort E), and 1×1011 Ad-hCMV-TK viral particles and 1×1011 Ad-hCMV-Flt3L viral particles (cohort F) following a 3+3 design. Two 1 mL tuberculin syringes were used to deliver freehand a mix of Ad-hCMV-TK and Ad-hCMV-Flt3L vectors into the walls of the resection cavity with a total injection of 2 mL distributed as 0·1 mL per site across 20 locations. Subsequently, patients received two 14-day courses of valacyclovir (2 g orally, three times per day) at 1-3 days and 10-12 weeks after vector administration and standad upfront chemoradiotherapy. The primary endpoint was the maximum tolerated dose of Ad-hCMV-Flt3L and Ad-hCMV-TK. Overall survival was a secondary endpoint. Recruitment is complete and the trial is finished. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01811992. FINDINGS: Between April 8, 2014, and March 13, 2019, 21 patients were assessed for eligibility and 18 patients with high-grade glioma were enrolled and included in the analysis (three patients in each of the six dose cohorts); eight patients were female and ten were male. Neuropathological examination identified 14 (78%) patients with glioblastoma, three (17%) with gliosarcoma, and one (6%) with anaplastic ependymoma. The treatment was well-tolerated, and no dose-limiting toxicity was observed. The maximum tolerated dose was not reached. The most common serious grade 3-4 adverse events across all treatment groups were wound infection (four events in two patients) and thromboembolic events (five events in four patients). One death due to an adverse event (respiratory failure) occurred but was not related to study treatment. No treatment-related deaths occurred during the study. Median overall survival was 21·3 months (95% CI 11·1-26·1). INTERPRETATION: The combination of two adenoviral vectors demonstrated safety and feasibility in patients with high-grade glioma and warrants further investigation in a phase 1b/2 clinical trial. FUNDING: Funded in part by Phase One Foundation, Los Angeles, CA, The Board of Governors at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, and The Rogel Cancer Center at The University of Michigan.
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Antineoplásicos , Glioblastoma , Glioma , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Quimiorradioterapia , Terapia Genética , Glioblastoma/genética , Glioblastoma/terapia , Glioma/genética , Glioma/terapia , Adolescente , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , IdosoRESUMO
In this paper, we study the problem of inferring spatially-varying Gaussian Markov random fields (SV-GMRF) where the goal is to learn a network of sparse, context-specific GMRFs representing network relationships between genes. An important application of SV-GMRFs is in inference of gene regulatory networks from spatially-resolved transcriptomics datasets. The current work on inference of SV-GMRFs are based on the regularized maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) and suffer from overwhelmingly high computational cost due to their highly nonlinear nature. To alleviate this challenge, we propose a simple and efficient optimization problem in lieu of MLE that comes equipped with strong statistical and computational guarantees. Our proposed optimization problem is extremely efficient in practice: we can solve instances of SV-GMRFs with more than 2 million variables in less than 2 minutes. We apply the developed framework to study how gene regulatory networks in Glioblastoma are spatially rewired within tissue, and identify prominent activity of the transcription factor HES4 and ribosomal proteins as characterizing the gene expression network in the tumor peri-vascular niche that is known to harbor treatment resistant stem cells.
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Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Redes Reguladoras de Genes/genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Distribuição Normal , AlgoritmosRESUMO
How cell metabolism regulates DNA repair is incompletely understood. Here, we define a GTP-mediated signaling cascade that links metabolism to DNA repair and has significant therapeutic implications. GTP, but not other nucleotides, regulates the activity of Rac1, a G protein, that promotes the dephosphorylation of serine 323 on Abl-interactor 1 (Abi-1) by protein phosphatase 5 (PP5). Dephosphorylated Abi-1, a protein previously not known to activate DNA repair, promotes non-homologous end joining. In patients and mouse models of glioblastoma, Rac1 and dephosphorylated Abi-1 mediate DNA repair and resistance to standard of care genotoxic treatments. The GTP-Rac1-PP5-Abi-1 signaling axis is not limited to brain cancer, as GTP supplementation promotes DNA repair and Abi-1-S323 dephosphorylation in non-malignant cells and protects mouse tissues from genotoxic insult. This unexpected ability of GTP to regulate DNA repair independently of deoxynucleotide pools has important implications for normal physiology and cancer treatment.
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INTRODUCTION: Molecular classification has transformed the management of brain tumors by enabling more accurate prognostication and personalized treatment. Access to timely molecular diagnostic testing for brain tumor patients is limited, complicating surgical and adjuvant treatment and obstructing clinical trial enrollment. METHODS: By combining stimulated Raman histology (SRH), a rapid, label-free, non-consumptive, optical imaging method, and deep learning-based image classification, we are able to predict the molecular genetic features used by the World Health Organization (WHO) to define the adult-type diffuse glioma taxonomy, including IDH-1/2, 1p19q-codeletion, and ATRX loss. We developed a multimodal deep neural network training strategy that uses both SRH images and large-scale, public diffuse glioma genomic data (i.e. TCGA, CGGA, etc.) in order to achieve optimal molecular classification performance. RESULTS: One institution was used for model training (University of Michigan) and four institutions (NYU, UCSF, Medical University of Vienna, and University Hospital Cologne) were included for patient enrollment in the prospective testing cohort. Using our system, called DeepGlioma, we achieved an average molecular genetic classification accuracy of 93.2% and identified the correct diffuse glioma molecular subgroup with 91.5% accuracy within 2 minutes in the operating room. DeepGlioma outperformed conventional IDH1-R132H immunohistochemistry (94.2% versus 91.4% accuracy) as a first-line molecular diagnostic screening method for diffuse gliomas and can detect canonical and non-canonical IDH mutations. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate how artificial intelligence and optical histology can be used to provide a rapid and scalable alternative to wet lab methods for the molecular diagnosis of brain tumor patients during surgery.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioma , Adulto , Humanos , Inteligência Artificial , Estudos Prospectivos , Glioma/diagnóstico por imagem , Glioma/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Imuno-Histoquímica , Isocitrato Desidrogenase/genética , Mutação/genéticaRESUMO
Molecular classification has transformed the management of brain tumors by enabling more accurate prognostication and personalized treatment. However, timely molecular diagnostic testing for patients with brain tumors is limited, complicating surgical and adjuvant treatment and obstructing clinical trial enrollment. In this study, we developed DeepGlioma, a rapid (<90 seconds), artificial-intelligence-based diagnostic screening system to streamline the molecular diagnosis of diffuse gliomas. DeepGlioma is trained using a multimodal dataset that includes stimulated Raman histology (SRH); a rapid, label-free, non-consumptive, optical imaging method; and large-scale, public genomic data. In a prospective, multicenter, international testing cohort of patients with diffuse glioma (n = 153) who underwent real-time SRH imaging, we demonstrate that DeepGlioma can predict the molecular alterations used by the World Health Organization to define the adult-type diffuse glioma taxonomy (IDH mutation, 1p19q co-deletion and ATRX mutation), achieving a mean molecular classification accuracy of 93.3 ± 1.6%. Our results represent how artificial intelligence and optical histology can be used to provide a rapid and scalable adjunct to wet lab methods for the molecular screening of patients with diffuse glioma.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioma , Adulto , Humanos , Inteligência Artificial , Estudos Prospectivos , Glioma/diagnóstico por imagem , Glioma/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Mutação , Isocitrato Desidrogenase/genética , Imagem Óptica , InteligênciaRESUMO
Development of spatial-integrative pre-clinical models is needed for glioblastoma, which are heterogenous tumors with poor prognosis. Here, we present an optimized protocol to generate three-dimensional ex vivo explant slice glioma model from orthotopic tumors, genetically engineered mouse models, and fresh patient-derived specimens. We describe a step-by-step workflow for tissue acquisition, dissection, and sectioning of 300-µm tumor slices maintaining cell viability. The explant slice model allows the integration of confocal time-lapse imaging with spatial analysis for studying migration, invasion, and tumor microenvironment, making it a valuable platform for testing effective treatment modalities. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Comba et al. (2022).1.
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Aims: Targeting tumor metabolism may improve the outcomes for patients with glioblastoma (GBM). To further preclinical efforts targeting metabolism in GBM, we tested the hypothesis that brain tumors can be stratified into distinct metabolic groups with different patient outcomes. Therefore, to determine if tumor metabolites relate to patient survival, we profiled the metabolomes of human gliomas and correlated metabolic information with clinical data. Results: We found that isocitrate dehydrogenase-wildtype (IDHwt) GBMs are metabolically distinguishable from IDH mutated (IDHmut) astrocytomas and oligodendrogliomas. Survival of patients with IDHmut gliomas was expectedly more favorable than those with IDHwt GBM, and metabolic signatures can stratify IDHwt GBMs subtypes with varying prognoses. Patients whose GBMs were enriched in amino acids had improved survival, while those whose tumors were enriched for nucleotides, redox molecules, and lipid metabolites fared more poorly. These findings were recapitulated in validation cohorts using both metabolomic and transcriptomic data. Innovation: Our results suggest the existence of metabolic subtypes of GBM with differing prognoses, and further support the concept that metabolism may drive the aggressiveness of human gliomas. Conclusions: Our data show that metabolic signatures of human gliomas can inform patient survival. These findings may be used clinically to tailor novel metabolically targeted agents for GBM patients with different metabolic phenotypes. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 39, 942-956.
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Astrocitoma , Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioblastoma , Glioma , Humanos , Mutação , Glioma/genética , Glioma/metabolismo , Astrocitoma/genética , Astrocitoma/metabolismo , Astrocitoma/patologia , Glioblastoma/genética , Glioblastoma/metabolismo , Glioblastoma/patologia , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/metabolismo , Isocitrato Desidrogenase/genética , Isocitrato Desidrogenase/metabolismoRESUMO
PURPOSE: Glioblastoma(GBM) is a lethal disease characterized by inevitable recurrence. Here we investigate the molecular pathways mediating resistance, with the goal of identifying novel therapeutic opportunities. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We developed a longitudinal in vivo recurrence model utilizing patient-derived explants to produce paired specimens(pre- and post-recurrence) following temozolomide(TMZ) and radiation(IR). These specimens were evaluated for treatment response and to identify gene expression pathways driving treatment resistance. Findings were clinically validated using spatial transcriptomics of human GBMs. RESULTS: These studies reveal in replicate cohorts, a gene expression profile characterized by upregulation of mesenchymal and stem-like genes at recurrence. Analyses of clinical databases revealed significant association of this transcriptional profile with worse overall survival and upregulation at recurrence. Notably, gene expression analyses identified upregulation of TGFß signaling, and more than one-hundred-fold increase in THY1 levels at recurrence. Furthermore, THY1-positive cells represented <10% of cells in treatment-naïve tumors, compared to 75-96% in recurrent tumors. We then isolated THY1-positive cells from treatment-naïve patient samples and determined that they were inherently resistant to chemoradiation in orthotopic models. Additionally, using image-guided biopsies from treatment-naïve human GBM, we conducted spatial transcriptomic analyses. This revealed rare THY1+ regions characterized by mesenchymal/stem-like gene expression, analogous to our recurrent mouse model, which co-localized with macrophages within the perivascular niche. We then inhibited TGFBRI activity in vivo which decreased mesenchymal/stem-like protein levels, including THY1, and restored sensitivity to TMZ/IR in recurrent tumors. CONCLUSIONS: These findings reveal that GBM recurrence may result from tumor repopulation by pre-existing, therapy-resistant, THY1-positive, mesenchymal cells within the perivascular niche.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioblastoma , Animais , Camundongos , Humanos , Glioblastoma/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Neoplasias Encefálicas/patologia , Recidiva Local de Neoplasia/genética , Recidiva Local de Neoplasia/tratamento farmacológico , Temozolomida/farmacologia , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos/genética , Antineoplásicos Alquilantes/farmacologiaRESUMO
Intra-tumoral heterogeneity is a hallmark of glioblastoma that challenges treatment efficacy. However, the mechanisms that set up tumor heterogeneity and tumor cell migration remain poorly understood. Herein, we present a comprehensive spatiotemporal study that aligns distinctive intra-tumoral histopathological structures, oncostreams, with dynamic properties and a specific, actionable, spatial transcriptomic signature. Oncostreams are dynamic multicellular fascicles of spindle-like and aligned cells with mesenchymal properties, detected using ex vivo explants and in vivo intravital imaging. Their density correlates with tumor aggressiveness in genetically engineered mouse glioma models, and high grade human gliomas. Oncostreams facilitate the intra-tumoral distribution of tumoral and non-tumoral cells, and potentially the collective invasion of the normal brain. These fascicles are defined by a specific molecular signature that regulates their organization and function. Oncostreams structure and function depend on overexpression of COL1A1. Col1a1 is a central gene in the dynamic organization of glioma mesenchymal transformation, and a powerful regulator of glioma malignant behavior. Inhibition of Col1a1 eliminates oncostreams, reprograms the malignant histopathological phenotype, reduces expression of the mesenchymal associated genes, induces changes in the tumor microenvironment and prolongs animal survival. Oncostreams represent a pathological marker of potential value for diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioblastoma , Glioma , Animais , Neoplasias Encefálicas/metabolismo , Glioblastoma/metabolismo , Glioma/patologia , Camundongos , Análise Espaço-Temporal , Microambiente Tumoral/genéticaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Accurate specimen analysis of skull base tumors is essential for providing personalized surgical treatment strategies. Intraoperative specimen interpretation can be challenging because of the wide range of skull base pathologies and lack of intraoperative pathology resources. OBJECTIVE: To develop an independent and parallel intraoperative workflow that can provide rapid and accurate skull base tumor specimen analysis using label-free optical imaging and artificial intelligence. METHODS: We used a fiber laser-based, label-free, nonconsumptive, high-resolution microscopy method (<60 seconds per 1 × 1 mm2), called stimulated Raman histology (SRH), to image a consecutive, multicenter cohort of patients with skull base tumor. SRH images were then used to train a convolutional neural network model using 3 representation learning strategies: cross-entropy, self-supervised contrastive learning, and supervised contrastive learning. Our trained convolutional neural network models were tested on a held-out, multicenter SRH data set. RESULTS: SRH was able to image the diagnostic features of both benign and malignant skull base tumors. Of the 3 representation learning strategies, supervised contrastive learning most effectively learned the distinctive and diagnostic SRH image features for each of the skull base tumor types. In our multicenter testing set, cross-entropy achieved an overall diagnostic accuracy of 91.5%, self-supervised contrastive learning 83.9%, and supervised contrastive learning 96.6%. Our trained model was able to segment tumor-normal margins and detect regions of microscopic tumor infiltration in meningioma SRH images. CONCLUSION: SRH with trained artificial intelligence models can provide rapid and accurate intraoperative analysis of skull base tumor specimens to inform surgical decision-making.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Neoplasias Meníngeas , Neoplasias da Base do Crânio , Inteligência Artificial , Neoplasias Encefálicas/cirurgia , Humanos , Neoplasias Meníngeas/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias Meníngeas/cirurgia , Imagem Óptica , Neoplasias da Base do Crânio/diagnóstico por imagem , Neoplasias da Base do Crânio/cirurgiaRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: Many neurosurgeons resect nonenhancing low-grade gliomas (LGGs) by using an inside-out piecemeal resection (PMR) technique. At the authors' institution they have increasingly used a circumferential, perilesional, sulcus-guided resection (SGR) technique. This technique has not been well described and there are limited data on its effectiveness. The authors describe the SGR technique and assess the extent to which SGR correlates with extent of resection and neurological outcome. METHODS: The authors identified all patients with newly diagnosed LGGs who underwent resection at their institution over a 22-year period. Demographics, presenting symptoms, intraoperative data, method of resection (SGR or PMR), volumetric imaging data, and postoperative outcomes were obtained. Univariate analyses used ANOVA and Fisher's exact test. Multivariate analyses were performed using multivariate logistic regression. RESULTS: Newly diagnosed LGGs were resected in 519 patients, 208 (40%) using an SGR technique and 311 (60%) using a PMR technique. The median extent of resection in the SGR group was 84%, compared with 77% in the PMR group (p = 0.019). In multivariate analysis, SGR was independently associated with a higher rate of complete (100%) resection (27% vs 18%) (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.1-2.6; p = 0.03). SGR was also associated with a statistical trend toward lower rates of postoperative neurological complications (11% vs 16%, p = 0.09). A subset analysis of tumors located specifically in eloquent brain demonstrated SGR to be as safe as PMR. CONCLUSIONS: The authors describe the SGR technique used to resect LGGs and show that SGR is independently associated with statistically significantly higher rates of complete resection, without an increase in neurological complications, than with PMR. SGR technique should be considered when resecting LGGs.
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Mutant isocitrate-dehydrogenase 1 (mIDH1) synthesizes the oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), which elicits epigenetic reprogramming of the glioma cells' transcriptome by inhibiting DNA and histone demethylases. We show that the efficacy of immune-stimulatory gene therapy (TK/Flt3L) is enhanced in mIDH1 gliomas, due to the reprogramming of the myeloid cells' compartment infiltrating the tumor microenvironment (TME). We uncovered that the immature myeloid cells infiltrating the mIDH1 TME are mainly nonsuppressive neutrophils and preneutrophils. Myeloid cell reprogramming was triggered by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) secreted by mIDH1 glioma stem/progenitor-like cells. Blocking G-CSF in mIDH1 gliomabearing mice restores the inhibitory potential of the tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells, accelerating tumor progression. We demonstrate that G-CSF reprograms bone marrow granulopoiesis, resulting in noninhibitory myeloid cells within mIDH1 glioma TME and enhancing the efficacy of immune-stimulatory gene therapy.
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Glioblastomas (GBM) are the most common and aggressive tumors of the central nervous system. Rapid tumor growth and diffuse infiltration into healthy brain tissue, along with high intratumoral heterogeneity, challenge therapeutic efficacy and prognosis. A better understanding of spatiotemporal tumor heterogeneity at the histological, cellular, molecular, and dynamic levels would accelerate the development of novel treatments for this devastating brain cancer. Histologically, GBM is characterized by nuclear atypia, cellular pleomorphism, necrosis, microvascular proliferation, and pseudopalisades. At the cellular level, the glioma microenvironment comprises a heterogeneous landscape of cell populations, including tumor cells, non-transformed/reactive glial and neural cells, immune cells, mesenchymal cells, and stem cells, which support tumor growth and invasion through complex network crosstalk. Genomic and transcriptomic analyses of gliomas have revealed significant inter and intratumoral heterogeneity and insights into their molecular pathogenesis. Moreover, recent evidence suggests that diverse dynamics of collective motion patterns exist in glioma tumors, which correlate with histological features. We hypothesize that glioma heterogeneity is not stochastic, but rather arises from organized and dynamic attributes, which favor glioma malignancy and influences treatment regimens. This review highlights the importance of an integrative approach of glioma histopathological features, single-cell and spatially resolved transcriptomic and cellular dynamics to understand tumor heterogeneity and maximize therapeutic effects.
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Glioblastoma, the deadliest form of primary brain tumor, remains a disease without cure. Treatment resistance is in large part attributed to limitations in the delivery and distribution of therapeutic agents. Over the last 20 years, numerous preclinical studies have demonstrated the feasibility and efficacy of stem cells as antiglioma agents, leading to the development of trials to test these therapies in the clinic. In this review we present and analyze these studies, discuss mechanisms underlying their beneficial effect and highlight experimental progress, limitations and the emergence of promising new therapeutic avenues. We hope to increase awareness of the advantages brought by stem cells for the treatment of glioblastoma and inspire further studies that will lead to accelerated implementation of effective therapies.
Lay abstract Glioblastoma is the deadliest and most common form of brain tumor, for which there is no cure. It is very difficult to deliver medicine to the tumor cells, because they spread out widely into the normal brain, and local blood vessels represent a barrier that most medicines cannot cross. It was shown, in many studies over the last 20 years, that stem cells are attracted toward the tumor and that they can deliver many kinds of therapeutic agents directly to brain cancer cells and shrink the tumor. In this review we analyze these studies and present new discoveries that can be used to make stem cell therapies for glioblastoma more effective to prolong the life of patients with brain tumors.
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Neoplasias Encefálicas , Glioblastoma , Neoplasias Encefálicas/terapia , Glioblastoma/terapia , Humanos , Células-TroncoRESUMO
PURPOSE: We hypothesized that dose-intensified chemoradiation therapy targeting adversely prognostic hypercellular (TVHCV) and hyperperfused (TVCBV) tumor volumes would improve outcomes in patients with glioblastoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS: This single-arm, phase 2 trial enrolled adult patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Patients with a TVHCV/TVCBV >1 cm3, identified using high b-value diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and dynamic contrast-enhanced perfusion MRI, were treated over 30 fractions to 75 Gy to the TVHCV/TVCBV with temozolomide. The primary objective was to estimate improvement in 12-month overall survival (OS) versus historical control. Secondary objectives included evaluating the effect of 3-month TVHCV/TVCBV reduction on OS using Cox proportional-hazard regression and characterizing coverage (95% isodose line) of metabolic tumor volumes identified using correlative 11C-methionine positron emission tomography. Clinically meaningful change was assessed for quality of life by the European Organisation for the Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire C30, for symptom burden by the MD Anderson Symptom Inventory for brain tumor, and for neurocognitive function (NCF) by the Controlled Oral Word Association Test, the Trail Making Test, parts A and B, and the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised. RESULTS: Between 2016 and 2018, 26 patients were enrolled. Initial patients were boosted to TVHCV alone, and 13 patients were boosted to both TVHCV/TVCBV. Gross or subtotal resection was performed in 87% of patients; 22% were O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) methylated. With 26-month follow-up (95% CI, 19-not reached), the 12-month OS rate among patients boosted to the combined TVHCV/TVCBV was 92% (95% CI, 78%-100%; P = .03) and the median OS was 20 months (95% CI, 18-not reached); the median OS for the whole study cohort was 20 months (95% CI, 14-29 months). Patients whose 3-month TVHCV/TVCBV decreased to less than the median volume (3 cm3) had superior OS (29 vs 12 months; P = .02). Only 5 patients had central or in-field failures, and 93% (interquartile range, 59%-100%) of the 11C-methionine metabolic tumor volumes received high-dose coverage. Late grade 3 neurologic toxicity occurred in 2 patients. Among non-progressing patients, 1-month and 7-month deterioration in quality of life, symptoms, and NCF were similar in incidence to standard therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Dose intensification against hypercellular/hyperperfused tumor regions in glioblastoma yields promising OS with favorable outcomes for NCF, symptom burden, and quality of life, particularly among patients with greater tumor reduction 3 months after radiation therapy.
Assuntos
Glioblastoma/terapia , Doses de Radiação , Adulto , Idoso , Quimiorradioterapia , Feminino , Glioblastoma/diagnóstico , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Qualidade de Vida , Dosagem RadioterapêuticaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain tumor in adulthood. Despite multimodality treatments, including maximal safe resection followed by irradiation and chemotherapy, the median overall survival times range from 14 to 16 months. However, a small subset of GBM patients live beyond 5 years and are thus considered long-term survivors. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of the clinical, radiographic, and molecular features of patients with newly diagnosed primary GBM who underwent treatment at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center was conducted. Eighty patients had sufficient quantity and quality of tissue available for next-generation sequencing and immunohistochemical analysis. Factors associated with survival time were identified using proportional odds ordinal regression. We constructed a survival-predictive nomogram using a forward stepwise model that we subsequently validated using The Cancer Genome Atlas. RESULTS: Univariate analysis revealed 3 pivotal genetic alterations associated with GBM survival: both high tumor mutational burden (P = .0055) and PTEN mutations (P = .0235) negatively impacted survival, whereas IDH1 mutations positively impacted survival (P < .0001). Clinical factors significantly associated with GBM survival included age (P < .0001), preoperative Karnofsky Performance Scale score (P = .0001), sex (P = .0164), and clinical trial participation (P < .0001). Higher preoperative T1-enhancing volume (P = .0497) was associated with shorter survival. The ratio of TI-enhancing to nonenhancing disease (T1/T2 ratio) also significantly impacted survival (P = .0022). CONCLUSIONS: Our newly devised long-term survival-predictive nomogram based on clinical and genomic data can be used to advise patients regarding their potential outcomes and account for confounding factors in nonrandomized clinical trials.