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Review
. 2023 Jan;161(2):373-381.
doi: 10.1007/s11060-022-04228-9. Epub 2023 Feb 18.

Molecular classification and grading of meningioma

Affiliations
Review

Molecular classification and grading of meningioma

MacLean P Nasrallah et al. J Neurooncol. 2023 Jan.

Abstract

Purpose: Meningiomas are the most common primary intracranial tumor in older adults (Ostrom et al. in Neuro Oncol 21(Suppl 5):v1-v100, 2019). Treatment is largely driven by, in addition to patient characteristics and extent of resection/Simpson grade, the World Health Organization (WHO) grading of meningiomas. The current grading scheme, based predominantly on histologic features and only limited molecular characterization of these tumors (WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board, in: Central nervous system tumours, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, 2021), (Mirian et al. in J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 91(4):379-387, 2020), does not consistently reflect the biologic behavior of meningiomas. This leads to both under-treatment and over-treatment of patients, and hence, suboptimal outcomes (Rogers et al. in Neuro Oncol 18(4):565-574). The goal of this review is to synthesize studies to date investigating molecular features of meningiomas as they relate to patient outcomes, in order to clarify best practices in assessing and, therefore, treating meningiomas.

Methods: The available literature of genomic landscape and molecular features of in meningioma was screened using PubMed.

Results: Greater understanding of meningiomas is reached by integrating histopathology, mutational analysis, DNA copy number changes, DNA methylation profiles, and potentially additional modalities to fully capture the clinical and biologic heterogeneity of these tumors.

Conclusion: Diagnosis and classification of meningioma is best accomplished using a combination of histopathology with genomic and epigenomic factors. Future classification schemes may benefit from such an integrated approach.

Keywords: Copy number variants; Meningioma; Methylation profiling; Molecular classification.

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References

    1. WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board (2021) Central nervous system tumours. International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon
    1. Sahm F et al (2016) TERT promoter mutations and risk of recurrence in meningioma. J Natl Cancer Inst 108(5):djv377 - PubMed - DOI
    1. Mirian C et al (2020) Poor prognosis associated with TERT gene alterations in meningioma is independent of the WHO classification: an individual patient data meta-analysis. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 91(4):378–387 - PubMed - DOI
    1. Rogers CL et al (2016) Pathology concordance levels for meningioma classification and grading in NRG Oncology RTOG Trial 0539. Neuro Oncol 18(4):565–574 - PubMed - DOI
    1. Suppiah S et al (2019) Molecular and translational advances in meningiomas. Neuro Oncol 21(Suppl 1):i4–i17 - PubMed - PMC - DOI

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