Genetic pathways to primary and secondary glioblastoma. Ohgaki H, Kleihues
P. Am J
Pathol. 2007 May;170(5):1445-53.
International Agency for Research on Cancer, 150 cours
Albert Thomas, 69372 Lyon Cedex 08, France. ohgaki@iarc.fr
Glioblastoma is the most frequent and most malignant human
brain tumor. The prognosis remains very poor, with most patients dying within
1 year after diagnosis. Primary and secondary glioblastoma constitute distinct
disease subtypes, affecting patients of different age and developing through
different genetic pathways. The majority of cases (>90%) are primary
glioblastomas that develop rapidly de novo, without clinical or histological
evidence of a less malignant precursor lesion. They affect mainly the elderly
and are genetically characterized by loss of heterozygosity 10q (70% of
cases), EGFR amplification (36%), p16(INK4a) deletion (31%), and PTEN
mutations (25%). Secondary glioblastomas develop through progression from
low-grade diffuse astrocytoma or anaplastic astrocytoma and manifest in
younger patients. In the pathway to secondary glioblastoma, TP53 mutations are
the most frequent and earliest detectable genetic alteration, already present
in 60% of precursor low-grade astrocytomas. The mutation pattern is
characterized by frequent G:C-->A:T mutations at CpG sites. During progression
to glioblastoma, additional mutations accumulate, including loss of
heterozygosity 10q25-qter ( approximately 70%), which is the most frequent
genetic alteration in both primary and secondary glioblastomas. Primary and
secondary glioblastomas also differ significantly in their pattern of promoter
methylation and in expression profiles at RNA and protein levels. This has
significant implications, particularly for the development of novel, targeted
therapies, as discussed in this review.