Glioblastoma
Glioblastoma | |
---|---|
Diagnosis in short | |
Glioblastoma. H&E stain. | |
| |
LM | astrocytic differentiation, nuclear atypia, necrosis, microvascular proliferation, +/-pseudopalisading necrosis |
Subtypes | gliosarcoma |
LM DDx | anaplastic astrocytoma |
IHC | GFAP +ve, IDH-1 -ve/+ve |
Site | brain, spinal cord |
| |
Radiology | intra-axial |
Prognosis | very poor |
Clin. DDx | metastatic brain tumours |
Glioblastoma a very common malignant primary brain tumour in adults. It has a very poor prognosis.
It was previously known as glioblastoma multiforme, abbreviated GBM.
General
- Median survival is measured in months.[1]
- Only about 5% can expect to survive more than three years.[2]
- Current classification recognizes three types:
- Glioblastoma, IDH-wildtype (aka primary GBM, ICD-O: 9440/3).
- Glioblastoma, IDH-mutant (aka secondary GBM, ICD-O: 9445/3).
- Glioblastoma, NOS (lack of molecular data).
Macroscopy
Features:
- Usu. in white matter.
- central necrotic core.
- ill-defined borders.
- yellowish to dark-brown changes.
- midline shift due to tumor mass.
- In the corpus callosum as bihemispheric "butterfly glioma"
Microscopic
Features:
- Astrocytic tumour with:
- Nuclear atypia.
- Necrosis.
- Endothelial proliferation (AKA microvascular proliferation).
- +/-"Pseudopalisading necrosis" - tumour cells lined-up like a picket fence around necrotic areas.
Glioblastoma variants:
- Giant cell glioblastoma (ICD-O: 9441/3)
- Bizarre multinucleated giant cells.
- Reticulin may be abundant.
- Mean age 44 years, outcome somewhat better than conventional GBM.
- IDH-wildtype, but frequent p53 mutations.
- Epitheloid glioblastoma (ICD-O: 9440/3) [3]
- Closely packed epithelioid to rhabdoid cells, often dicohesive.
- Xanthomaous changes less common than in PXA.
- Children and young adults, outcome particularly poor.
- Up to 50% BRAF V600E mutations.
- Gliosarcoma (ICD-O: 9442/3)
Morphological patterns in Glioblastoma:
- Lipidized (foamy)cells [4]
- Adipocyte-like maturation [5]
- Rhabdoid glioblastoma (focal loss of INI-1) [6]
- Melanotic glioblastoma [7]
- Glioblastoma with oligodendroglial component (no improved survival) [8]
- Granular cell Glioblastoma [9]
- Glioblastoma with primitive neuronal component.[10]
- formerly known as: PNET-like component.
- have a tendency to CSF dissemination.[11]
- Small cell glioblastoma.
- Ependymal-like growth patterns.
- Glioneuronal tumor with neuropil-like islands.[12]
Images
www:
- Microvascular proliferation in a GBM (ouhsc.edu).
- Pseudopalisading necrosis in GBM (aacrjournals.org).
IHC
- GFAP +ve (cytoplasm).
- MAP2 +ve.
- IDH-1 -ve (95%).
- +ve if developed from lower grade astrocytoma (secondary GBM) -> classify tumor as Glioblastoma, IDH-mutant.
- WT-1 +ve (cytoplasm).
- p53 +ve (70%).
- Neurofilament -ve.
- Synaptophysin -ve (residual Cortex may be +ve).
- panCK -ve (except for GBM with epithelial component).
- ATRX: +ve (no loss, nuclei)
- -ve if developed from lower grade astrocytoma (secondary GBM).
- EMA: Dot-like expression less common than in ependymomas.
- MIB-1 usu. 15-30%, but varies greatly.
Molecular
- Seen in inherited tumor syndromes:
- Lynch-Syndrome
- Neurofibromatosis 1
- Li-Fraumeni-Syndrome
- Turcot-Syndrome
- Most common alterations (TCGA[13])
- Tp53 (42% of the tumors mutated)
- PTEN (33%).
- NF1 (21%).
- EGFR (18%).
- RB1 (11%).
- PI3K-pathway genes (7-10%).
- Pediatric glioblastoma
- are morphologically indistinct from adult GBM.
- show frequent H3F3A mutations and PDGFRA mutations (Note: H3F3A K27M mutations are classified as K27 mutated midline glioma).
- Consider Epithelioid GBM, when BRAF V600E mutated.
- Diagnostic/therapeutic relevant markers:
- MGMT promoter methylation status
- Absence of LOH 1p/19q (otherwise classify tumor as oligodendroglioma).
See also
References
- ↑ Jubelirer, SJ.. "A review of the treatment and survival rates of 138 patients with glioblastoma multiforme.". W V Med J 92 (4): 186-90. PMID 8772403.
- ↑ Krex, D.; Klink, B.; Hartmann, C.; von Deimling, A.; Pietsch, T.; Simon, M.; Sabel, M.; Steinbach, JP. et al. (Oct 2007). "Long-term survival with glioblastoma multiforme.". Brain 130 (Pt 10): 2596-606. doi:10.1093/brain/awm204. PMID 17785346.
- ↑ te journal | last1 = Kleinschmidt-DeMasters | first1 = BK. | last2 = Aisner | first2 = DL. | last3 = Birks | first3 = DK. | last4 = Foreman | first4 = NK. | title = Epithelioid GBMs show a high percentage of BRAF V600E mutation. | journal = Am J Surg Pathol | volume = 37 | issue = 5 | pages = 685-98 | month = May | year = 2013 | doi = 10.1097/PAS.0b013e31827f9c5e | PMID = 23552385 }}
- ↑ Kepes, JJ.; Rubinstein, LJ. (May 1981). "Malignant gliomas with heavily lipidized (foamy) tumor cells: a report of three cases with immunoperoxidase study.". Cancer 47 (10): 2451-9. PMID 7023643.
- ↑ Rickert, CH.; Riemenschneider, MJ.; Schachenmayr, W.; Richter, HP.; Bockhorn, J.; Reifenberger, G.; Paulus, W. (Jul 2009). "Glioblastoma with adipocyte-like tumor cell differentiation--histological and molecular features of a rare differentiation pattern.". Brain Pathol 19 (3): 431-8. doi:10.1111/j.1750-3639.2008.00199.x. PMID 18691268.
- ↑ Hiroyuki, M.; Ogino, J.; Takahashi, A.; Hasegawa, T.; Wakabayashi, T. (Feb 2015). "Rhabdoid glioblastoma: an aggressive variaty of astrocytic tumor.". Nagoya J Med Sci 77 (1-2): 321-8. PMID 25797998.
- ↑ Jaiswal, S.; Agrawal, V.; Vij, M.; Sahu, RN.; Jaiswal, AK.; Behari, S.. "Glioblastoma with melanotic differentiation.". Clin Neuropathol 29 (5): 330-3. PMID 20860897.
- ↑ Hegi, ME.; Janzer, RC.; Lambiv, WL.; Gorlia, T.; Kouwenhoven, MC.; Hartmann, C.; von Deimling, A.; Martinet, D. et al. (Jun 2012). "Presence of an oligodendroglioma-like component in newly diagnosed glioblastoma identifies a pathogenetically heterogeneous subgroup and lacks prognostic value: central pathology review of the EORTC_26981/NCIC_CE.3 trial.". Acta Neuropathol 123 (6): 841-52. doi:10.1007/s00401-011-0938-4. PMID 22249618.
- ↑ Schittenhelm, J.; Psaras, T.. "Glioblastoma with granular cell astrocytoma features: a case report and literature review.". Clin Neuropathol 29 (5): 323-9. PMID 20860896.
- ↑ Louis, DN.; Perry, A.; Reifenberger, G.; von Deimling, A.; Figarella-Branger, D.; Cavenee, WK.; Ohgaki, H.; Wiestler, OD. et al. (Jun 2016). "The 2016 World Health Organization Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System: a summary.". Acta Neuropathol 131 (6): 803-20. doi:10.1007/s00401-016-1545-1. PMID 27157931.
- ↑ Perry, A.; Miller, CR.; Gujrati, M.; Scheithauer, BW.; Zambrano, SC.; Jost, SC.; Raghavan, R.; Qian, J. et al. (Jan 2009). "Malignant gliomas with primitive neuroectodermal tumor-like components: a clinicopathologic and genetic study of 53 cases.". Brain Pathol 19 (1): 81-90. doi:10.1111/j.1750-3639.2008.00167.x. PMID 18452568.
- ↑ Ishizawa, K.; Hirose, T.; Sugiyama, K.; Kageji, T.; Nobusawa, S.; Homma, T.; Komori, T.; Sasaki, A.. "Pathologic diversity of glioneuronal tumor with neuropil-like islands: a histological and immunohistochemical study with a special reference to isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) in 5 cases.". Clin Neuropathol 31 (2): 67-76. PMID 22385787.
- ↑ Verhaak, RG.; Hoadley, KA.; Purdom, E.; Wang, V.; Qi, Y.; Wilkerson, MD.; Miller, CR.; Ding, L. et al. (Jan 2010). "Integrated genomic analysis identifies clinically relevant subtypes of glioblastoma characterized by abnormalities in PDGFRA, IDH1, EGFR, and NF1.". Cancer Cell 17 (1): 98-110. doi:10.1016/j.ccr.2009.12.020. PMID 20129251.