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Review
. 2012 Sep;14 Suppl 4(Suppl 4):iv100-8.
doi: 10.1093/neuonc/nos206.

Personalized care in neuro-oncology coming of age: why we need MGMT and 1p/19q testing for malignant glioma patients in clinical practice

Affiliations
Review

Personalized care in neuro-oncology coming of age: why we need MGMT and 1p/19q testing for malignant glioma patients in clinical practice

Michael Weller et al. Neuro Oncol. 2012 Sep.

Abstract

Histological subtyping and grading by malignancy are the cornerstones of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of tumors of the central nervous system. They shall provide clinicians with guidance as to the course of disease to be expected and the choices of treatment to be made. Nonetheless, patients with histologically identical tumors may have very different outcomes, notably in patients with astrocytic and oligodendroglial gliomas of WHO grades II and III. In gliomas of adulthood, 3 molecular markers have undergone extensive studies in recent years: 1p/19q chromosomal codeletion, O(6)-methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter methylation, and mutations of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) 1 and 2. However, the assessment of these molecular markers has so far not been implemented in clinical routine because of the lack of therapeutic implications. In fact, these markers were considered to be prognostic irrespective of whether patients were receiving radiotherapy (RT), chemotherapy, or both (1p/19q, IDH1/2), or of limited value because testing is too complex and no chemotherapy alternative to temozolomide was available (MGMT). In 2012, this situation has changed: long-term follow-up of the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 9402 and European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer 26951 trials demonstrated an overall survival benefit from the addition to RT of chemotherapy with procarbazine/CCNU/vincristine confined to patients with anaplastic oligodendroglial tumors with (vs without) 1p/19q codeletion. Furthermore, in elderly glioblastoma patients, the NOA-08 and the Nordic trial of RT alone versus temozolomide alone demonstrated a profound impact of MGMT promoter methylation on outcome by therapy and thus established MGMT as a predictive biomarker in this patient population. These recent results call for the routine implementation of 1p/19q and MGMT testing at least in subpopulations of malignant glioma patients and represent an encouraging step toward the development of personalized therapeutic approaches in neuro-oncology.

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Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Exemplary results obtained by commonly used methods for the assessment of molecular markers in gliomas. (A) 1p/19q codeletion. Left panel: PCR analysis for loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at microsatellite markers on 1p (D1S2696) and 19q (D19S572) in a glioblastoma (GBIV) and in an anaplastic oligodendroglioma (AOIII). Note LOH at both markers (arrowheads) in the tumor DNA (T) as compared to the patient's blood DNA (B) in the AOIII but not in the GBIV. Right panel: Demonstration of 1p and 19q codeletion by FISH in an oligodendroglioma (FISH images were kindly provided by Dr David Capper, Heidelberg). Dual color probe sets detecting loci on 1p23 (red) and 1q25 (green) or 19q13 (red) and 19p13 (green) were used and nuclei were counterstained with 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (blue). Note that most nuclei show 2 green signals with the reference probes but only 1 red signal with the 1p23 or 19q13 probes. (B) IDH1 mutation. Left panel: diffuse astrocytoma with immunostaining of tumor cells for R132H mutant IDH1 protein, Right panel: pyrogram (reverse sequence) indicating a heterozygous C-to-T point mutation at nucleotide 394 of the IDH1 gene (arrow) resulting in a missense mutation at codon 132 (c.394C>T, R132C) in another case of diffuse astrocytoma. (C) MGMT promoter methylation. Upper panel: Methylation-specific PCR for unmethylated (U) and methylated (M) promoter sequences in 3 GBIVs, a no template control, the glioblastoma cell line A172 with a methylated MGMT promoter, and peripheral blood cells with an unmethylated MGMT promoter. Tumor 1 lacked MGMT promoter methylation, while tumors 2 and 3 had MGMT methylated promoters. Bottom panel: MGMT promoter methylation analysis by pyrosequencing of sodium bisulfite–modified DNA extracted from a GBIV. The mean percentage of methylation at the individual CpG sites (arrows) is noted in the blue boxes on top of the pyrogram.

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