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“Life Cycle of a Glioma” From a Molecular Genomic Perspective Murali Nagarajan1, Ramya Gaddikeri1, Kedar Sharbidre1, Miral Jhaveri1 and Ashok Srinivasan2 Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL1 and University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI2 Control no. 1232 eEdE no. 49 Disclosures • Murali Nagarajan – Nothing to disclose • Ramya Gaddikeri - Nothing to disclose • Kedar Sharbidre- Nothing to disclose • Miral Jhaveri- Nothing to disclose • Ashok Srinivasan- Nothing to disclose Objectives • To discuss key genomic and epigenetic signatures which occur during development of a glioma. • To review specific anatomic and physiologic MRI features associated various genetic alterations. • To highlight the clinical impact of the MRI findings in management of gliomas. Background • Gliomas form the vast majority of primary adult malignant brain tumors with glioblastoma accounting for more than half of them. • Despite significant advances in treatment with multimodal therapy glioblastoma remains a deadly disease with median overall survival of 12-17 months. • One histologic group, but exhibits a wide range of molecular and genetic heterogeneity. • Imaging Genomics links the imaging features to predict and correlate genomic profiles within the tumor non invasively. • Holds promise to aid in more individualized targeted treatment. Pathogenesis of Glioblastoma • A glioblastoma typically shows more than 60 genetic alterationsmutations, deletions and amplifications, etc. These work through: Cell proliferation signaling pathway - Receptor tyrosine kinase/phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN)/phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) Tumor suppression pathway - p53(TP53) and retinoblastoma 1(Rb1) Effects of Genetic Alterations Effects of Gene Alterations Characteristics Result Angiogenesis Hallmark of transition from low grade to high grade. Hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) 1α and vascular endothelial growth factor(VEGF) are important molecules. Activated through EGFR, IDH1 and PTEN mutations Capillary proliferation and vascular leakiness Cellular proliferation Lack of cellular inhibition from mutations of tumor suppressors like p53 and Rb1EGFR/variant III overexpression, increased PDGF activity Increased tumor bulk Cellular invasion Alterations in cell adhesion, extracellular matrix remodeling, cell migration and immune modulation Infiltrative tumor phenotype Cell survival and apoptosis Enhanced cell survival against apoptosis and other cell death mechanisms Resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. Major factor in tumor recurrence EGFR-epidermal growth factor receptor; PDGF- platelet derived growth factor, IDH – Isocitrate dehydrogenase; PTEN-phosphatase and tensin homolog Typical Imaging Features of a Glioblastoma • Thick irregular heterogeneous ring enhancement • Central necrosis • Hemorrhage • Restricted diffusion • Increase in relative CBV • Peritumoral T2 Hyperintensity- vasogenic edema+non enhancing tumor infiltration Typical Glioblastoma Enhancement and Necrosis Restricted Diffusion Edema and Hemorrhage Increased rCBV Typical Glioblastoma on HPE • • • • Necrosis Microvascular proliferation Invasion Cellularity, nuclear atypia and mitotic activity Imaging and Genomic Correlation • What is Radiogenomics? - A new field that links specific imaging traits called “radiophenotypes” to genomic profiles. • Radiophenotypes are based on conventional imaging such as T1, T2 and advanced imaging like DWI and PWI. RadiophenotypesConventional Contrast Enhancement Increased expression of angiogenesis and hypoxia related genes in the enhancing portions of the tumor. Completely enhancing tumors show increased expression of VEGF as well as several factors related to angiogenesis when compared to incompletely enhancing tumors T2/FLAIR Abnormality Vasogenic Edema Infiltrative Tumor Very bright T2 signal with typical pseudopod appearance- secondary to increased vascular leakinessassociated with angiogenesis related factors Less bright T2 signal- increased expression of genes associated with gliogenesis and central nervous system development Necrosis Necrosis is related to abnormal cell survival and resistance to apoptosis Contrast-Necrosis Ratio A high ratio of enhancing tissue volume to necrosis correlates with EGFR overexpression EGFR-epidermal growth factor receptor Mass Effect Increased expression of genes associated with cellular proliferation resulting in increase in EGFR and PDGFR EGFR-epidermal growth factor receptor; PDGF- platelet derived growth factor receptor Subventricular Zone Involvement Diminished expression of glioma stem cell associated genes RadiophenotypesAdvanced Restricted Diffusion Inverse relationship between ADC value and cellular density as well as other histological markers of aggressiveness Can be used to distinguish nonenhancing tumor from vasogenic edema. Relative Cerebral Blood Volume Increased expression of angiogenesis related factors VEGF and HIF 1α VEGF- vascular endothelial growth factor, HIF- Hypoxia inducible factor Spectroscopy Choline Choline Increase in choline and choline to creatine ratio is indicator of cellular proliferation. Associated with increase in Ki67 labeling index-histological measure of proliferation Biomarkers and Associated Imaging Features • Biomarker- a characteristic that is objectively measured and evaluated as an indicator of normal biological processes, pathological processes or pharmacological responses to a therapeutic intervention. • Some important Biomarkers-MGMT promoter hypermethylation -IDH1 mutation -EGFR -1p/19q deletion -TP53 mutation MGMT Promoter Hypermethylation • O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase- DNA repair protein-removes harmful alkyl groupsantagonizes temozolamide(TMZ) and RT. • If MGMT promoter is hypermethylated MGMT decreases, thus favorable. MGMT Promoter Hypermethylation Methylated tumors - less edema compared to unmethylated tumors. Methylated tumors occur more frequently in the left temporal lobe. Methylated tumors with IDH1 mutation - left frontal lobe. Unmethylated tumors - right cerebral hemisphere Primary methylated glioblastoma – heterogeneous on T2 and show ring enhancement Secondary unmethylated – more homogeneous on T2 and irregular and nodular enhancement. Primary unmethylated glioblastoma show intermediate characteristics. IDH Mutation • Isocitrate dehydrogenase- Tumor suppressor - Normally protects against oxidative damage. • IDH mutation oncometabolite 2-hydroxyglutatrate gliomagenesis via angiogenesis, DNA hypermethylation and inhibition of cell differentiation. • IDH1 and IDH2 mutations are seen in gliomas with IDH1>>IDH2. • IDH mutations much more common in secondary glioblastoma than primary. IDH Mutation More invasive phenotype. Large nonenhancing tumors. More infiltrative. Can be mutifocal. Frontal lobe 2-hydroxyglutarate can be detected on dedicated MR spectroscopy (not on routine spectroscopy). EGFR Amplification • Common molecular event- associated with invasion, proliferation, apoptosis and angiogenesis. Activation of EGFR variant III and PTEN. • More commonly seen in primary glioblastoma than secondary. EGFR Amplification High ratio of volume of T2 hyperintense component to enhancing volume. Fuzzier margins. Increased ratio of contrast enhancing tumor to central necrosis. Restricted diffusion 1p/19q Deletion • Aka loss of heterozygosity (LOH)- genetic hallmark of oligodendrogliomas. In glioblastoma, seen in those with oligodendroglial component. • Imaging correlate: Indistinct T1 margins indicating invasiveness. Mixed signal on T1 and T2. Calcification and hemorrhage. • 1p deletion is associated with high CBV indicating neovascularization. • Predilection for frontal lobe. Insular lesions rarely delete 1p/19q. 1p/19q Deletion Indistinct T1 margins indicating invasiveness. Mixed signal on T1 and T2. Calcification and hemorrhage 1p deletion is associated with high CBV indicating neovascularization. Predilection for frontal lobe. Insular lesions rarely delete 1p/19q TP53 • TP53= mutant tumor p53. Tumor suppressorinactivation leads to cellular proliferation. It indicates transformation of low grade gliomas to glioblastoma. • Low TP53- ill-defined margins. High TP53- well defined margins with typical ring enhancement. Biomarkers/MRI- Prognostic and Predictive Features Biomarker Radiation therapy Chemotherapy Prognostic value MGMT promoter hypermethylation Respond Respond Favorable IDH Mutation Respond Respond Favorable EGFR Amplification/ overexpression Resistant Respond Unfavourable 1p/19q deletion Respond Respond Favorable Primary vs Secondary Glioblastoma Clinical Histologic features Genetic alterations Primary glioblastoma Secondary glioblastoma Fraction 95% 5% Mean age Older Younger Mean Overall Survival Shorter Longer Necrosis More common Less common Oligo component Infrequent Common IDH 1 mutation Rare Very common TP 53 mutation Infrequent Very common EGFR amplification Common Rare 1p/19q deletion Rare Common Secondary glioblastomas develop from a known grade II/III glioma. Primary glioblastomas don’t have any evidence of preexisting glioma. Secondary glioblastomas have better prognosis. Based on the above histological and genetic differences, the respective imaging correlates can potentially help to differentiate these two tumor types. Molecular Subtype Classification of Glioblastoma Tumor type Gene expression Classical EGFR Amplification Mesenchymal NF1 deletion Proneural PDGFRA/IDH1 mutation Neural ERBB2(neural marker) overexpression 4 subtypes of glioblastoma based on genomic analysis. Different treatment response despite being the same histopathological type. Proneural type is mostly secondary glioblastoma and carries best prognosis. Classical and mesenchymal subtypes show significantly increased survival following aggressive chemoradiation. Radiophenotypes for corresponding molecular markers can help in treatment selection. Impact of Imaging • Diagnosis and characterization of tumor- extract structural, compositional, physiologic, and functional information. • Non invasively characterize molecular status of tumor – provides insights to molecular behavior, hypoxia, angiogenesis, etc. • Assess spatial and temporal changes in gene expression. Can potentially negate sampling errors in gene analysis. • Surgical planning– Effectively delineate the extent of the tumor including enhancing and non-enhancing components. Guiding stereotactic biopsy to target more aggressive areas. • Potential to classify tumors for personalized targeted treatment such as TMZ, anti VEGF, anti EGFR etc. • Can act as a surrogate for prognostic and predictive biomarkers • Monitoring growth or response to therapy- Radiation, chemotherapy and targeted molecular therapy. Pseudoprogression • Increase in contrast enhancing lesion size after RT + TMZ followed by improvement without any treatment. No/minimal clinical deterioration. • Most prevalent in first 12 weeks after completion of RT. • Occurs in >90% methylated tumors due to higher sensitivity to treatment vs 40% of unmethylated tumors. • Pathology- reactive radiation induced changes, increased permeability, necrosis, edema and gliosis. • MRI may help in detection of true progression if contrast enhancement occurs outside radiation field or if there is increase in rCBV. If not, only follow-up or pathology can tell the difference. Pseudoprogression Before treatment for a multifocal glioblastoma. Note the high CBV 10-29-13 2-10-14 After RT+TMZ – significant increase in edema and size of the enhancing lesion. Only minimal increase in CBV 3-25-14 After 6 weeks – significant decrease in edema. Decrease in enhancement. No increase in CBV FLAIR Post T1 rCBV Pseudoresponse • Antiangiogenic agents like bevacizumab (Avastin) antipermeability, pseudonormalization of blood brain barrier- rapid decrease in contrast enhancement and rCBV in hours. Reduction in vasogenic edema. • Increase in progression free survival but only modest improvement in overall survival. • Tumor progression under treatment: enlargement of non-enhancing portion(FLAIR). • New areas of restricted diffusion may represent tumor progressionprecede enhancing lesions. • Caveat: persistent stable restricted diffusion may represent areas of chronic ischemia and gelatinous material. Pseudoresponse Before After Rapid decrease in contrast enhancement and rCBV in hours. Reduction in vasogenic edema Persistent Restricted Diffusion on Avastin 2-19-12 Persistent stable restricted diffusion may represent areas of chronic ischemia and gelatinous material and not tumor 1-23-13 Note the low rCBV 4-24-13 DWI ADC rCBV Summary • Characteristic genetic alterations occur during the lifespan of a glioma and many of these are associated with specific MRI features. • MRI can act as a surrogate for prognostic and predictive biomarkers and thus can play a critical role in management. References • Jamshidi N, Diehn M, Bredel M, et al. Illuminating radiogenomic characteristics of glioblastoma multiforme through integration of MR imaging, messenger RNA expression, and DNA copy number variation. Radiology. 2014 Jan;270(1):12. doi: 10.1148/radiol.13130078. Epub 2013 Oct 28. • Barajas RF Jr, Hodgson JG, Chang JS, et al. Glioblastoma multiforme regional genetic and cellular expression patterns: influence on anatomic and physiologic MR imaging. Radiology. 2010 Feb;254(2):564 76. doi: 10.1148/radiol.09090663. • Celso Hygino da Cruz L. Jr, Kimura M. Neuroimaging and Genetic Influence in treating Brain Neoplasms. Neuroimaging Clinics, 2015 Feb, Vol 25, Issue 1, pg 121-140 • Belden CJ, Valdes PA, Ran C et al. Genetics of glioblastoma: A window into its imaging and histopathologic variability.Radiographics. 2011 Oct;31(6):1717-40. doi: 10.1148/rg.316115512 • Bruzzone MG, Eoli M, Cuccarini V, et al. Genetic signature of adult gliomas and correlation with MRI features. Expert Rev Mol Diagn. 2009 Oct;9(7):70920. doi: 10.1586/erm.09.44. Review.