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Review
. 2023 Oct 28;402(10412):1564-1579.
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(23)01054-1. Epub 2023 Sep 19.

Primary brain tumours in adults

Affiliations
Review

Primary brain tumours in adults

Martin J van den Bent et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

The most frequent adult-type primary CNS tumours are diffuse gliomas, but a large variety of rarer CNS tumour types exists. The classification of these tumours is increasingly based on molecular diagnostics, which is reflected in the extensive molecular foundation of the recent WHO 2021 classification of CNS tumours. Resection as extensive as is safely possible is the cornerstone of treatment in most gliomas, and is now also recommended early in the treatment of patients with radiological evidence of histologically low-grade tumours. For the adult-type diffuse glioma, standard of care is a combination of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Although treatment with curative intent is not available, combined modality treatment has resulted in long-term survival (>10-20 years) for some patients with isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) mutant tumours. Other rarer tumours require tailored approaches, best delivered in specialised centres. Targeted treatments based on molecular alterations still only play a minor role in the treatment landscape of adult-type diffuse glioma, and today are mainly limited to patients with tumours with BRAFV600E (ie, Val600Glu) mutations. Immunotherapy for CNS tumours is still in its infancy, and so far, trials with checkpoint inhibitors and vaccination studies have not shown improvement in patient outcomes in glioblastoma. Current research is focused on improving our understanding of the immunosuppressive tumour environment, the molecular heterogeneity of tumours, and the role of tumour microtube network connections between cells in the tumour microenvironment. These factors all appear to play a role in treatment resistance, and indicate that novel approaches are needed to further improve outcomes of patients with CNS tumours.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests MJvdB has received honoraria from Genenta, Servier, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Carthera, Nerviano, Chimerix, Roche, Fore Biotherapeutics, Menari Semline, and Sumitomo Pharma Oncology. He is a member of the European Association of Neuro-Oncology Guideline Committee and member of the RANO steering group. PJF has received grants from the Brain Tumour Charity, the KWF Kankerbestrijding, and de Strijd van Salland, and has received honoraria paid to his institution by Aurikamed. MS has received honoraria paid to her institution from GE Healthcare and Aunt Minnie. DC has received grants from Novocure, is receiving royalties from Dianova and Roche Diagnostics, has received honoraria from lectures given to WFNOS, and has patents issued for immunohistochemistry antibodies for BRAF(V600E) and R132H and for DNA methylation methods for brain tumour classification. SMC has received institutional grants from NIH/NCI, Silicon Valley Foundation, Sandler Foundation, and the Ivy Brain Tumor Center, is the Editor in Chief of Neuro-Oncology, a foundation member of the Society of Neuro Oncology, a grant reviewer for the Brain Tumour Charity and the Sontag Foundation, and is serving on an AstraZeneca advisory board. MG and JECB declare no competing interests.

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