The 2007 WHO classification of tumours of the
central nervous system.
Louis DN, Ohgaki H, Wiestler OD, Cavenee WK,
Burger PC, Jouvet A, Scheithauer BW, Kleihues P.
Acta Neuropathol.
2007 Aug;114(2):97-109. Epub 2007 Jul 6. Review. Erratum in: Acta Neuropathol.
2007 Nov;114(5):547.
Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
The fourth edition of the World Health
Organization (WHO) classification of tumours of the central nervous system,
published in 2007, lists several new entities, including angiocentric glioma,
papillary glioneuronal tumour, rosette-forming glioneuronal tumour of the
fourth ventricle, papillary tumour of the pineal region, pituicytoma and
spindle cell oncocytoma of the adenohypophysis. Histological variants were
added if there was evidence of a different age distribution, location, genetic
profile or clinical behaviour; these included pilomyxoid astrocytoma,
anaplastic medulloblastoma and medulloblastoma with extensive nodularity. The
WHO grading scheme and the sections on genetic profiles were updated and the
rhabdoid tumour predisposition syndrome was added to the list of familial
tumour syndromes typically involving the nervous system. As in the previous,
2000 edition of the WHO 'Blue Book', the classification is accompanied by a
concise commentary on clinico-pathological characteristics of each tumour
type. The 2007 WHO classification is based on the consensus of an
international Working Group of 25 pathologists and geneticists, as well as
contributions from more than 70 international experts overall, and is
presented as the standard for the definition of brain tumours to the clinical
oncology and cancer research communities world-wide.