ERN GENTURIS clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis, treatment, management and surveillance of people with schwannomatosis
- PMID: 35361920
- PMCID: PMC9259735
- DOI: 10.1038/s41431-022-01086-x
ERN GENTURIS clinical practice guidelines for the diagnosis, treatment, management and surveillance of people with schwannomatosis
Abstract
A Guideline Group (GG) was convened from multiple specialties and patients to develop the first comprehensive schwannomatosis guideline. The GG undertook thorough literature review and wrote recommendations for treatment and surveillance. A modified Delphi process was used to gain approval for recommendations which were further altered for maximal consensus. Schwannomatosis is a tumour predisposition syndrome leading to development of multiple benign nerve-sheath non-intra-cutaneous schwannomas that infrequently affect the vestibulocochlear nerves. Two definitive genes (SMARCB1/LZTR1) have been identified on chromosome 22q centromeric to NF2 that cause schwannoma development by a 3-event, 4-hit mechanism leading to complete inactivation of each gene plus NF2. These genes together account for 70-85% of familial schwannomatosis and 30-40% of isolated cases in which there is considerable overlap with mosaic NF2. Craniospinal MRI is generally recommended from symptomatic diagnosis or from age 12-14 if molecularly confirmed in asymptomatic individuals whose relative has schwannomas. Whole-body MRI may also be deployed and can alternate with craniospinal MRI. Ultrasound scans are useful in limbs where typical pain is not associated with palpable lumps. Malignant-Peripheral-Nerve-Sheath-Tumour-MPNST should be suspected in anyone with rapidly growing tumours and/or functional loss especially with SMARCB1-related schwannomatosis. Pain (often intractable to medication) is the most frequent symptom. Surgical removal, the most effective treatment, must be balanced against potential loss of function of adjacent nerves. Assessment of patients' psychosocial needs should be assessed annually as well as review of pain/pain medication. Genetic diagnosis and counselling should be guided ideally by both blood and tumour molecular testing.
© 2022. The Author(s).
Conflict of interest statement
All authors of the ERN GENTURIS guideline have provided disclosure statements on all relationships that they have that might be perceived to be a potential source of a competing interests. DGE and RF report receipt of honoraria or consultation fees from AstraZeneca. MK and DGE report receipt of honoraria or consultation fees from Recursion. DGE and EL report receipt of honoraria or consultation fees from Springworks Therapeutics. LP reported receipt of grants/research support from Devyser. NT reports participation in a company sponsored speaker’s bureau from Stryker. DP reports reimbursement of travel expenses for medical conferences by Medtronic and Nevro Corp. All participants of the ERN GENTURIS schwannomatosis Delphi survey have provided disclosure statements on all relationships that they have that might be perceived to be a potential source of a competing interests. HH report receipt of honoraria or consultation fees from Pfizer. BF reports receipt of honoraria from Gruenenthal UK and Gruenenthal Europe.
References
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