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CTNI-16. Monogerm, a novel proof-of-principle Bayesian phase II trial design of carbonplatin ot vinblastine monotherapy induction prior to radiotherapy for intracranial germinoma [Abstract] (2024)
Kirton, Laura ; Apps, John ; Lawson, Anna ; Arvanitis, Theodoros ; Mitra, Dipayan ; Gagan, Richard ; Patel, Hiten ; Peet, Andrew ; Fern, Lorna ; Williams, Emma ; Coleman, Nicholas ; Ajithkumar, Thankamma ; Bison, Brigitte ; Veal, Gareth ; Stark, Daniel ; Morana, Giovanni ; Nicholson, James ; Billingham, Lucinda ; Murray, Matthew
P2-101 Weight development and neuroendocrine deficits following proton beam therapy in children with craniopharyngioma [Abstract] (2024)
Bischoff, Martin ; Beckhaus, Julia ; Khalil, Dalia Ahmad ; Sabine, Frisch ; Koska, Benjamin ; Kiewert, Cordula ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Bison, Brigitte ; Friedrich, Carsten ; Müller, Hermann L. ; Timmermann, Beate
Leptomeningeal dissemination in choroid plexus tumors: magnetic resonance imaging appearance and risk factors (2025)
Nunes do Espirito Santo, Daniel ; Warmuth-Metz, Monika ; Monoranu, Camelia-Maria ; Hasselblatt, Martin ; Thomas, Christian ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Krauß, Jürgen ; Schweitzer, Tilmann ; Bison, Brigitte ; Eyrich, Matthias ; Kordes, Uwe ; Obrecht-Sturm, Denise ; Pham, Mirko ; Quenzer, Annika
Background: Intracranial choroid plexus tumors (CPT) are rare and primarily affect young children. Leptomeningeal dissemination (LMD) has been reported not only in high-grade choroid plexus carcinoma (CPC) but also in lower histological grades; however, a systematic evaluation of CPT-specific imaging characteristics remains lacking. Methods: We analyzed the imaging characteristics of LMD in a single-center pediatric cohort of 22 CPT patients (thirteen choroid plexus papilloma (CPP), six atypical choroid plexus papilloma (aCPP), three CPC), comparing LMD features with those of the primary tumor. Additionally, we examined the correlation between resection status and LMD development during follow-up. Results: At diagnosis, we observed true LMD in three (two CPCs, one CPP) and pseudo-LMD in one case (CPP). During follow-up, two CPP patients developed cystic LMD, and one aCPP patient developed a solid metastasis. LMD had characteristics of the primary tumor in 3/4 cases. Incomplete resection was associated with a higher risk of LMD ( p = 0.025). Conclusions: LMD can occur in both high- and lower-grade CPT, presenting at diagnosis as well as in relapsed lower-grade cases. Notable MR-imaging features include pseudo-LMD at diagnosis and cystic LMD in relapsed CPP cases. Incomplete tumor resection may increase the risk of LMD, although further validation is needed.
Impact of molecular classification on prognosis in children and adolescents with spinal ependymoma: results from the HIT-MED database (2024)
Engertsberger, Lara ; Benesch, Martin ; Mynarek, Martin ; Tonn, Svenja ; Obrecht-Sturm, Denise ; Perwein, Thomas ; Stickan-Verfürth, Martina ; Funk, Angela ; Timmermann, Beate ; Bockmayr, Michael ; Eckhardt, Alicia ; Claviez, Alexander ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Riemenschneider, Markus J. ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Bison, Brigitte ; Warmuth-Metz, Monika ; Pajtler, Kristian W. ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Schüller, Ulrich
Background Ependymomas of the spinal cord are rare among children and adolescents, and the individual risk of disease progression is difficult to predict. This study aims to evaluate the prognostic impact of molecular typing on pediatric spinal cord ependymomas. Methods Eighty-three patients with spinal ependymomas ≤22 years registered in the HIT-MED database (German brain tumor registry for children, adolescents, and adults with medulloblastoma, ependymoma, pineoblastoma, and CNS-primitive neuroectodermal tumors) between 1992 and 2022 were included. Forty-seven tumors were analyzed by DNA methylation array profiling. In 6 cases, HOXB13 and MYCN proteins were detected as surrogate markers for specific methylation classes. Ten patients had NF2-related schwannomatosis. Results With a median follow-up time of 4.9 years, 5- and 10-year overall survival (OS) were 100% and 86%, while 5- and 10-year progression-free survival (PFS) were 65% and 54%. Myxopapillary ependymoma (SP-MPE, n = 32, 63%) was the most common molecular type followed by spinal ependymoma (SP-EPN, n = 17, 33%) and MYCN-amplified ependymoma (n = 2, 4%). One case could not be molecularly classified, and one was reclassified as anaplastic pilocytic astrocytoma. 5-year PFS did not significantly differ between SP-MPE and SP-EPN (65% vs. 78%, P = .64). MYCN-amplification was associated with early relapses (<2.3 years) in both cases and death in one patient. Patients with SP-MPE subtype B (n = 9) showed a non-significant trend for better 5 years-PFS compared to subtype A (n = 18; 86% vs. 56%, P = .15). The extent of resection and WHO tumor grades significantly influenced PFS in a uni- and multivariate analysis. Conclusions Molecular typing of pediatric spinal ependymomas aids in identifying very high-risk MYCN-amplified ependymomas. Further insights into the molecular heterogeneity of spinal ependymomas are needed for future clinical decision-making.
Diffuse pediatric high-grade glioma of methylation-based RTK2A and RTK2B subclasses present distinct radiological and histomolecular features including Gliomatosis cerebri phenotype (2024)
Tauziède-Espariat, Arnault ; Friker, Lea L. ; Nussbaumer, Gunther ; Bison, Brigitte ; Dangouloff-Ros, Volodia ; Métais, Alice ; Sumerauer, David ; Zamecnik, Josef ; Benesch, Martin ; Perwein, Thomas ; van Vuurden, Dannis ; Wesseling, Pieter ; Morales La Madrid, Andrés ; Garrè, Maria Luisa ; Antonelli, Manila ; Giangaspero, Felice ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Sturm, Dominik ; Jones, David T. W. ; Pfister, Stefan M. ; Grabovska, Yura ; Mackay, Alan ; Jones, Chris ; Grill, Jacques ; Ajlil, Yassine ; von Bueren, André O. ; Karremann, Michael ; Hoffmann, Marion ; Kramm, Christof M. ; Kwiecien, Robert ; Castel, David ; Gielen, Gerrit H. ; Varlet, Pascale
Abstract Diffuse pediatric-type high-grade gliomas (pedHGG), H3- and IDH-wildtype, encompass three main DNA-methylation-based subtypes: pedHGG-MYCN, pedHGG-RTK1A/B/C, and pedHGG-RTK2A/B. Since their first description in 2017 tumors of pedHGG-RTK2A/B have not been comprehensively characterized and clinical correlates remain elusive. In a recent series of pedHGG with a Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) growth pattern, an increased incidence of pedHGG-RTK2A/B (n = 18) was observed. We added 14 epigenetically defined pedHGG-RTK2A/B tumors to this GC series and provided centrally reviewed radiological, histological, and molecular characterization. The final cohort of 32 pedHGG-RTK2A/B tumors consisted of 25 pedHGG-RTK2A (78%) and seven pedHGG-RTK2B (22%) cases. The median age was 11.6 years (range, 4–17) with a median overall survival of 16.0 months (range 10.9–28.2). Seven of 11 of the newly added cases with imaging available showed a GC phenotype at diagnosis or follow-up. PedHGG-RTK2B tumors exhibited frequent bithalamic involvement (6/7, 86%). Central neuropathology review confirmed a diffuse glial neoplasm in all tumors with prominent angiocentric features in both subclasses. Most tumors (24/27 with available data, 89%) diffusely expressed EGFR with focal angiocentric enhancement. PedHGG-RTK2A tumors lacked OLIG2 expression, whereas 43% (3/7) of pedHGG-RTK2B expressed this glial transcription factor. ATRX loss occurred in 3/6 pedHGG-RTK2B samples with available data (50%). DNA sequencing (pedHGG-RTK2A: n = 18, pedHGG-RTK2B: n = 5) found EGFR alterations (15/23, 65%; predominantly point mutations) in both subclasses. Mutations in BCOR (14/18, 78%), SETD2 (7/18, 39%), and the hTERT promoter (7/19, 37%) occurred exclusively in pedHGG-RTK2A tumors, while pedHGG-RTK2B tumors were enriched for TP53 alterations (4/5, 80%). In conclusion, pedHGG-RTK2A/B tumors are characterized by highly diffuse-infiltrating growth patterns and specific radiological and histo-molecular features. By comprehensively characterizing methylation-based tumors, the chance to develop specific and effective therapy concepts for these detrimental tumors increases.
Treatment-related survival patterns in diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma using a historical cohort: a report from the European Society for Pediatric Oncology DIPG/DMG Registry (2024)
Baugh, Joshua N. ; Veldhuijzen van Zanten, Sophie ; Fiocco, Marta ; Colditz, Niclas ; Hoffmann, Marion ; Janssens, Geert O. ; Valentini, Chiara ; Hargrave, Darren ; Wiese, Maria ; von Bueren, André O. ; Karremann, Michael ; Perwein, Thomas ; Nussbaumer, Gunther ; Benesch, Martin ; Sturm, Dominik ; Gielen, Gerrit H. ; Krause, Mechthild ; Eyrich, Matthias ; Hoving, Eelco W. ; Bison, Brigitte ; van Vuurden, Dannis G. ; Kramm, Christof M.
Background Our aim is to investigate the association of treatment with survival in patients with diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) by examining 6 historical treatment paths. Methods We retrospectively analyzed data from 409 patients with radiologically centrally reviewed DIPG, sourced from the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology HIT-HGG trial database and the SIOPE-DIPG/DMG Registry. Survival outcomes were estimated using the Kaplan–Meier method, and univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were estimated to study treatment effects. Results The median overall survival (OS) from diagnosis was 11.2 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 10.5–11.9). Patients who by choice received no frontline treatment had an OS of 3.0 months (95% CI, 2.0–4.0), while those treated with radiation therapy (RT) alone had a median OS of 10.4 months (95% CI, 9.1–11.8). Those receiving RT combined with chemotherapy had the longest median OS of 11.7 months (95% CI, 10.8–12.6). The median post-progression survival (PPS) was 4.1 months (95% CI, 3.5–4.7). Patients who relapsed and did not receive treatment had a PPS of 2.2 months (95% CI, 1.8–2.6), while those treated with chemotherapy alone had a PPS of 4.4 months (95% CI, 3.7–5.0), and those who underwent reirradiation, with or without chemotherapy, had the longest survival after relapse of 6.6 months (95% CI, 5.3–8.0). Treatment differences remained significant in multivariable analysis adjusted for age and symptom duration in both diagnosis and relapse setting. Conclusions This study shows increased survival outcomes associated with radiation and chemotherapy treatment or a combination thereof, at diagnosis and relapse, in a historical DIPG cohort.
Comparative clinical and imaging‐based evaluation of therapeutic modalities in CNS embryonal tumours with PLAGL amplification (2025)
Keck, Michaela‐Kristina ; Tietze, Anna ; Bison, Brigitte ; Avula, Shivaram ; Engelhardt, Julien ; Faure‐Conter, Cécile ; Fenouil, Tanguy ; Figarella‐Branger, Dominique ; Goebell, Einar ; Gojo, Johannes ; Haberler, Christine ; Hakumäki, Juhana ; Hayden, James T. ; Korhonen, Laura S. ; Koscielniak, Ewa ; Kramm, Christof M. ; Kranendonk, Mariëtte E. G. ; Lequin, Maarten ; Ludlow, Louise E. ; Meyronet, David ; Nyman, Per ; Øra, Ingrid ; Perwein, Thomas ; Pesola, Jouni ; Rauramaa, Tuomas ; Reddingius, Roel ; Samuel, David ; Schouten‐van Meeteren, Antoinette Y. N. ; Sexton‐Oates, Alexandra ; Vasiljevic, Alexandre ; von Kalle, Thekla ; Wefers, Annika K. ; Wesseling, Pieter ; Zamecnik, Josef ; Zapotocky, Michal ; von Hoff, Katja ; Jones, David T. W.
Aims Embryonal tumours with PLAGL1 or PLAGL2 amplification (ET, PLAGL) show substantial heterogeneity regarding their clinical characteristics and have been treated inconsistently, resulting in diverse outcomes. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the clinical behaviour of ET, PLAGL and elucidate their response pattern across the different applied treatment regimens. Methods We conducted an in-depth retrospective analysis of clinical and serial imaging data of 18 patients with ET, PLAGL (nine each of PLAGL1 and PLAGL2 amplified). Results Patients with PLAGL1-amplified tumours (ET, PLAGL1) had fewer relapses (3/9), while PLAGL2-amplified tumours (ET, PLAGL2) were prone to early relapse or progression (8/9) and to distant, leptomeningeal and intraventricular relapses. Progression-free survival differed significantly between the subtypes (log-rank test, p = 0.0055). Postoperative treatment included chemotherapy (n = 17, various protocols), alone (n = 8) or combined with radiotherapy (n = 9). Responses to chemotherapy were observed in both subtypes, and incomplete resection was not associated with inferior survival. All three survivors with ET, PLAGL2 were treated with induction and high-dose chemotherapy with (n = 1—low-dose CSI and boost) or without (n = 2) radiotherapy, whereas five patients with less intensive chemotherapy relapsed. All six survivors with ET, PLAGL1 were treated with conventional chemotherapy regimens, with (n = 4—local radiotherapy n = 3; CSI and boost n = 1) or without (n = 2) radiotherapy. Two patients with ET, PLAGL1 relapsed after 8 years. Conclusions Adjuvant therapy should be considered for all ET, PLAGL patients: Patients with ET, PLAGL2 might benefit from intensified chemotherapy regimens. In contrast, patients with ET, PLAGL1 showed superior outcomes without high-dose chemotherapy or craniospinal irradiation.
Neuroendocrine deficits and weight development before and after proton therapy in children with craniopharyngioma (2025)
Bischoff, M. ; Beckhaus, J. ; Khalil, D. A. ; Sen, F. ; Frisch, S. ; Koska, B. ; Kiewert, C. ; Bison, Brigitte ; Kortmann, R.-D. ; Friedrich, C. ; Müller, H. L. ; Timmermann, B.
Aims Our objective was to analyse tumour- and treatment-related factors influencing endocrine morbidity and obesity pre- and post-proton beam therapy (PBT) in paediatric patients with craniopharyngioma. Materials and methods A total of 65 patients at the onset of PBT were included in the analysis within our prospective registry study. The data pertaining to endocrine deficits and BMI prior to PBT were retrieved from the medical records on a retrospective basis. Cumulative incidences (CI) of endocrinopathies, age- and sex-adjusted BMI standard deviation scores (BMI-SDS) were calculated. Results Before PBT, 90.8% had ≥1 neuroendocrine deficit. Diabetes insipidus (DI) was attributed to surgery in 96%. Patients with postoperative DI had a higher 3-year CI of adrenocorticotropic hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone deficiency rates compared to those without DI (p < .001). At PBT start, 47.7% had already panhypopituitarism compared to 67.7% at the last follow-up (FU). Median FU post-PBT was 3.2 years (range, 1.0–9.6). Post-PBT, 38.2% remained free of additional hormone deficiencies. A trend towards lower endocrine morbidity scores for patients who received PBT during their primary treatment compared to irradiation at progression did not reach statistical significance (p = .068). The BMI-SDS increase from diagnosis to the start of radiotherapy was significantly greater than from the start of PBT to the end of FU (mean BMI-SDS increase: 0.61, ±1.16 vs. 0.13, ±0.84, p = 0.019), with a median time of 10.2 and 38.4 months, respectively. In the multivariate analysis, hypothalamic involvement (p = .042) and the BMI-SDS level at diagnosis (p = .006) were identified as clinical factors indicating severe obesity at FU (BMI-SDS ≥+2). Conclusions Panhypopituitarism is frequently observed in paediatric patients with craniopharyngioma prior to PBT. The potential benefits of early PBT on endocrine outcomes require further investigation through longer FU periods. The greatest increase in weight occurred before radiotherapy. Endocrine deficiencies and weight gain are multifactorial and require close monitoring.
Recurrence patterns in pediatric intracranial ependymal neoplasm: a systematic imaging work-up (2025)
Stock, Annika ; Krumma, Judith ; Fleischhack, Gudrun ; Tippelt, Stephan ; Rink, Lydia ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Mynarek, Martin ; Obrecht-Sturm, Denise ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Pfister, Stefan M. ; Sturm, Dominik ; Pajtler, Kristian W. ; Schüller, Ulrich ; Timmermann, Beate ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Bison, Brigitte ; Pham, Mirko ; Warmuth-Metz, Monika
Purpose Currently, the different types of ependymal neoplasm (EPN) are defined by anatomical localization and genetics. This retrospective multicenter study aimed to analyze the imaging patterns of both local and distant recurrences in supratentorial (ST) and posterior fossa (PF) EPN. Methods We exclusively evaluated patients with recurrent EPN. To form the basis for follow-up evaluations the imaging characteristics for ST-EPN and PF-EPN were assessed and compared to each other. Follow-up assessments included the idenTIFFication of local recurrent tumors, leptomeningeal dissemination, secondary intraparenchymal lesions, and extraneural metastases. MR-signal characteristics of local recurrent tumors were compared to the primary tumor. Results The imaging series included 73 patients (median age at diagnosis 4.6 years; 56 PF-EPN). Recurrences were observed at up to five time points, with a total of 145 recurrence events documented. At first recurrence most PF-EPN recurred locally (29/56), while ST-EPN relapsed by intracranial dissemination (9/17). Local recurrent tumor grew fast and differed in up to one-fifth from the primary (13.2% lower T2-signal, 14.6% brighter T1-signal, 19% less contrast-enhancement). Leptomeningeal dissemination in ST-EPN is mainly restricted to intracranial (90.5%) while PF-EPN more frequently present with spinal spread (45.7%). Transient post-radiogenic lesions (n = 2) and secondary malignancies (n = 2) were rare. Extraneural metastases (n = 3) were found mainly near the surgical access. Conclusion Recurrences can occur multiple times in EPN patients, and the recurrence patterns differ between ST-EPN and PF-EPN. Imaging characteristics of local recurrences can differ from the primary tumor which is crucial for accurate diagnosis and treatment planning.
European standard clinical practice recommendations for paediatric high-grade gliomas (2025)
Szychot, Elwira ; Giraud, Géraldine ; Hargrave, Darren ; van Vuurden, Dannis ; Grill, Jacques ; Biassoni, Veronica ; Massimo, Maura ; von Bueren, André O. ; Kebudi, Rejin ; João Gil-da-Costa, Maria ; Veldhuijzen van Zanten, Sophie ; Bailey, Simon ; Karremann, Michael ; Bolle, Stephanie ; Ajithkumar, Thankamma ; Krause, Mechthild ; Lassen-Ramshad, Yasmin ; Janssens, Geert ; Morana, Giovanni ; Löbel, Ulrike ; Avula, Shivaram ; Bison, Brigitte ; Lequin, Maarten ; Aquilina, Kristian ; Thomale, Ulrich ; Nilsson, Pelle ; Hamdeh, Sami Bui-Quy Abu ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Varlet, Pascale ; Jacques, Thomas S. ; Wesseling, Pieter ; Jones, David ; Tabori, Uri ; Das, Anirban ; Mulligan, David ; Kozmann, Francesca ; Kramm, Christof M.
Paediatric high-grade gliomas (pedHGGs) are highly invasive brain tumours accounting for approximately 15 % of all central nervous system (CNS) tumours in children and adolescents. The outcome for these tumours is generally poor with 5-year survival rates of less than 20 %. Despite improved biological insights into pedHGGs and the promise of more effective therapies, little progress has been made in the effective treatment and the outcome of these tumours over the last four decades. Much of the evidence for the use of chemotherapy in pedHGGs is extrapolated from adult data, and the evidence for its use in the paediatric population is still weak. This guideline was written by members of the SIOPE HGG Working Group as part of the European Standard Clinical Practice (ESCP) Project. The guideline aims to integrate available evidence-based and expert opinion-based information to assist healthcare professionals in the management of pedHGGs and in an attempt to provide equity in healthcare reflecting the varying resources of each European country.
Gliomatosis cerebri in children: a poor prognostic phenotype of diffuse gliomas with a distinct molecular profile (2024)
Nussbaumer, Gunther ; Benesch, Martin ; Grabovska, Yura ; Mackay, Alan ; Castel, David ; Grill, Jacques ; Alonso, Marta M. ; Antonelli, Manila ; Bailey, Simon ; Baugh, Joshua N. ; Biassoni, Veronica ; Blattner-Johnson, Mirjam ; Broniscer, Alberto ; Carai, Andrea ; Colafati, Giovanna Stefania ; Colditz, Niclas ; Corbacioglu, Selim ; Crampsie, Shauna ; Entz-Werle, Natacha ; Eyrich, Matthias ; Friker, Lea L. ; Frühwald, Michael C. ; Garrè, Maria Luisa ; Gerber, Nicolas U. ; Giangaspero, Felice ; Gil-da-Costa, Maria J. ; Graf, Norbert ; Hargrave, Darren ; Hauser, Peter ; Herrlinger, Ulrich ; Hoffmann, Marion ; Hulleman, Esther ; Izquierdo, Elisa ; Jacobs, Sandra ; Karremann, Michael ; Kattamis, Antonis ; Kebudi, Rejin ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Kwiecien, Robert ; Massimino, Maura ; Mastronuzzi, Angela ; Miele, Evelina ; Morana, Giovanni ; Noack, Claudia M. ; Pentikainen, Virve ; Perwein, Thomas ; Pfister, Stefan M. ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Roka, Kleoniki ; Rossi, Sabrina ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Schiavello, Elisabetta ; Seidel, Clemens ; Štěrba, Jaroslav ; Sturm, Dominik ; Sumerauer, David ; Tacke, Anna ; Temelso, Sara ; Valentini, Chiara ; van Vuurden, Dannis ; Varlet, Pascale ; Veldhuijzen van Zanten, Sophie E. M. ; Vinci, Maria ; von Bueren, André O. ; Warmuth-Metz, Monika ; Wesseling, Pieter ; Wiese, Maria ; Wolff, Johannes E. A. ; Zamecnik, Josef ; Morales La Madrid, Andrés ; Bison, Brigitte ; Gielen, Gerrit H. ; Jones, David T. W. ; Jones, Chris ; Kramm, Christof M.
Background The term gliomatosis cerebri (GC), a radiology-defined highly infiltrating diffuse glioma, has been abandoned since molecular GC-associated features could not be established. Methods We conducted a multinational retrospective study of 104 children and adolescents with GC providing comprehensive clinical and (epi-)genetic characterization. Results Median overall survival (OS) was 15.5 months (interquartile range, 10.9–27.7) with a 2-year survival rate of 28%. Histopathological grading correlated significantly with median OS: CNS WHO grade II: 47.8 months (25.2–55.7); grade III: 15.9 months (11.4–26.3); grade IV: 10.4 months (8.8–14.4). By DNA methylation profiling (n = 49), most tumors were classified as pediatric-type diffuse high-grade glioma (pedHGG), H3-/IDH-wild-type (n = 31/49, 63.3%) with enriched subclasses pedHGG_RTK2 (n = 19), pedHGG_A/B (n = 6), and pedHGG_MYCN (n = 5), but only one pedHGG_RTK1 case. Within the pedHGG, H3-/IDH-wild-type subgroup, recurrent alterations in EGFR (n = 10) and BCOR (n = 9) were identified. Additionally, we observed structural aberrations in chromosome 6 in 16/49 tumors (32.7%) across tumor types. In the pedHGG, H3-/IDH-wild-type subgroup TP53 alterations had a significant negative effect on OS. Conclusions Contrary to previous studies, our representative pediatric GC study provides evidence that GC has a strong predilection to arise on the background of specific molecular features (especially pedHGG_RTK2, pedHGG_A/B, EGFR and BCOR mutations, chromosome 6 rearrangements).
CNS embryonal tumor with PLAGL amplification, a new tumor in children and adolescents: insights from a comprehensive MRI analysis (2025)
Tietze, A. ; Bison, Brigitte ; Engelhardt, J. ; Fenouil, T. ; Figarella-Branger, D. ; Goebell, E. ; Hakumäki, J. ; Koscielniak, E. ; Ludlow, L. E. ; Meyronet, D. ; Nyman, P. ; Øra, I. ; Pesola, J. ; Rauramaa, T. ; Reddingius, R. E. ; Samuel, D. ; Sexton-Oates, A. ; Vasiljevic, A. ; Wefers, A. K. ; Zamecnik, J. ; Jones, D. T. W. ; Keck, M. K. ; von Hoff, K.
Human-level differentiation of medulloblastoma from pilocytic astrocytoma: a real-world multicenter pilot study (2024)
Wiestler, Benedikt ; Bison, Brigitte ; Behrens, Lars ; Tüchert, Stefanie ; Metz, Marie ; Griessmair, Michael ; Jakob, Marcus ; Schlegel, Paul-Gerhardt ; Binder, Vera ; von Luettichau, Irene ; Metzler, Markus ; Johann, Pascal ; Hau, Peter ; Frühwald, Michael
Medulloblastoma and pilocytic astrocytoma are the two most common pediatric brain tumors with overlapping imaging features. In this proof-of-concept study, we investigated using a deep learning classifier trained on a multicenter data set to differentiate these tumor types. We developed a patch-based 3D-DenseNet classifier, utilizing automated tumor segmentation. Given the heterogeneity of imaging data (and available sequences), we used all individually available preoperative imaging sequences to make the model robust to varying input. We compared the classifier to diagnostic assessments by five readers with varying experience in pediatric brain tumors. Overall, we included 195 preoperative MRIs from children with medulloblastoma (n = 69) or pilocytic astrocytoma (n = 126) across six university hospitals. In the 64-patient test set, the DenseNet classifier achieved a high AUC of 0.986, correctly predicting 62/64 (97%) diagnoses. It misclassified one case of each tumor type. Human reader accuracy ranged from 100% (expert neuroradiologist) to 80% (resident). The classifier performed significantly better than relatively inexperienced readers (p < 0.05) and was on par with pediatric neuro-oncology experts. Our proof-of-concept study demonstrates a deep learning model based on automated tumor segmentation that can reliably preoperatively differentiate between medulloblastoma and pilocytic astrocytoma, even in heterogeneous data.
An overview of the European standard clinical practice recommendations for choroid plexus tumours (2025)
King, David ; Bison, Brigitte ; Cruz, Ofelia ; Faria, Claudia C. ; Filipek, Iwona ; Finlay, Jonathan L. ; Garami, Miklós ; Kordes, Uwe R. ; Löbel, Ulrike ; Maclean, Jilly ; Stamm Mikkelsen, Torben ; Obrecht-Sturm, Denise ; Solanki, Guirish ; Thomas, Christian ; Timmerman, Beate ; Zapotocky, Michal ; Adamski, Jenny
Choroid plexus tumours (CPT) are rare epithelial brain tumours that primarily affect very young children. They can be classified as benign choroid plexus papilloma (CPP, WHO grade 1), intermediate grade atypical choroid plexus papilloma (aCPP, WHO grade 2) or highly malignant choroid plexus carcinoma (CPC, WHO grade 3). Treatment is dependent on tumour grade, surgical resection, the age of the child and somatic and germline TP53 mutational status. CPP and aCPP have a good prognosis and are frequently curable with surgery alone. In contrast, the prognosis in CPC is often poor, despite intensive multimodal treatment with surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Management is complicated by the increased incidence of germline TP53 mutations and cancer predisposition (Li-Fraumeni syndrome), especially in CPC, whilst the rarity of the diagnosis means there are a lack of robust clinical data on which to base treatment decisions. Studies generally comprise of retrospective, single arm and centre trials or case series, and patient numbers are small leading to conflicting results that are difficult to interpret. Standardised treatment protocols have historically been lacking. The aim of this document is to provide a reference standard for the treatment of CPT on behalf of the European Society for Paediatric Oncology (SIOPE). We review the previously published literature and provide consensus key recommendations for the management of CPP, aCPP and CPC including surgical approaches and when appropriate, the role of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Suggested follow-up and possible relapse strategies are also suggested.
Pediatric-type diffuse low-grade gliomas with MYB alterations: neuroimaging of the diffuse astrocytomas, MYB or MYBL1-altered (2025)
Coppola, Fiorenza ; Bison, Brigitte ; Tietze, Anna ; Dangouloff-Ros, Volodia ; Lequin, Maarten ; Sudhakar, Sniya ; Jacques, Thomas S. ; Palomäki, Maarit ; Alves, Cesar A. P. ; Mankad, Kshitij ; Hernáiz Driever, Pablo ; Horn, Svea ; Behrens, Lars ; Hargrave, Darren R. ; Morana, Giovanni ; Löbel, Ulrike
Malignant rhabdoid tumors of cranial nerves: a clinically distinct group with characteristic neuroradiological, histopathological, and molecular features (2025)
Gruhle, Miriam ; Bison, Brigitte ; Gastberger, Katharina ; Johann, Pascal D. ; Teichert von Lüttichau, Irene ; Steinborn, Marc ; Tippelt, Stephan ; Fleischhack, Gudrun ; Lehrnbecher, Thomas ; Siebert, Reiner ; Tüchert‐Knoll, Stefanie E. ; Melchior, Patrick ; Vokuhl, Christian ; Hartmann, Wolfgang ; Hasselblatt, Martin ; Frühwald, Michael C.
Background: Malignant rhabdoid tumors occasionally develop along cranial nerves, but clinical, histopathological, and molecular features have not been examined in larger series. Procedure: We retrospectively interrogated data from the European Rhabdoid Registry, EU-RHAB, to identify malignant rhabdoid tumors affecting cranial nerves. We retrieved clinical information and reviewed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data. Furthermore, histopathological review and molecular profiling were performed. Results: Among 425 patients, we identified a total of 14 harboring malignant rhabdoid tumors with cranial nerve involvement. Median age at diagnosis was 28 months (range: 0–13 years). Various cranial nerves were affected, the trigeminal nerve (n = 4) and the facial and/or vestibulocochlear nerve (n = 5) being most frequently involved. In most cases, the initial clinical and neuroradiological suspicion was schwannoma. Neuroradiology review of magnetic resonance imaging studies confirmed a tumor
Prolactin serum concentrations in childhood-onset craniopharyngioma patients (2025)
Sowithayasakul, Panjarat ; Beckhaus, Julia ; Özyurt, Jale ; Bison, Brigitte ; Friedrich, Carsten ; Müller, Hermann L.
CPT-SIOP registry: evaluation of risk factors for disease progression in pediatric choroid plexus papilloma (2025)
Fiedler, Christian ; Kordes, Uwe R. ; Thomas, Christian ; Hasselblatt, Martin ; Bison, Brigitte ; Behrens, Lars ; Mynarek, Martin ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Timmermann, Beate ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Adamski, Jenny ; Wolff, Johannes E. A. ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Obrecht-Sturm, Denise
Purpose Choroid plexus papilloma (CPP) and atypical choroid plexus papilloma (aCPP) have excellent outcomes. However, some CPP/aCPP relapse and may qualify for postoperative adjuvant treatment. Methods German patients from the International CPT-SIOP Registry diagnosed with CPP/aCPP between 2011 and 2023 were included and analysed according to initial staging (postoperative residual tumor [R+], metastases [M+]), biology, postoperative treatment strategy and outcome. Additionally, patients from the published CPT-SIOP-2000 trial (PMID34997889) were combined with the registry cohort for validation purpose. Results Ninety-three patients were identified (male: n = 53, female: n = 40). Median age at diagnosis was 1.9 (0.1–17.6) years. Initial staging was R0/M0 in n = 61, R+/M0 in n = 24, R0/M + in n = 5 and R+/M + in n = 3. aCPP was diagnosed in n = 38 patients. Molecular subgroup was available for n = 36: ”adult” n = 3, “pediatric A” n = 21 and “pediatric B” n = 12 (6/12 aCPP). Median follow-up was 5.5 (± 0.99) years. Twelve tumors relapsed: R0/M0 n = 4, R+/M0 n = 7, R+/M + n = 1. One patient with relapse died. Most patients did not receive postoperative treatment (n = 88). Five patients (R0/M + n = 2; R+/M + n = 1; R0/M0 n = 2) received postoperative chemotherapy. None was irradiated during first-line treatment. In the enlarged cohort (n = 197), histological diagnosis had a significant impact on PFS (5y-PFS: CPP 90 ± 3.1, aCPP 78.6 ± 4.6, PFS = 0.01). Both, R+ (5y-PFS: R0 90.6 ± 2.6, R + 69.1 ± 7.0, PFS = 0.01) as well as molecular subgroup “pediatric B” (5y-PFS: pediatric A 95.2%±3.3%, pediatric B: 69.5 ± 8.6%, PFS = 0.02), were associated with inferior PFS, especially in aCPP. Conclusion Incomplete resection and biology impact on PFS especially in aCPP. These results extend the evidence for current stratification and treatment strategies.
Temozolomide-based radio-chemotherapy for newly diagnosed pediatric high-grade gliomas (HIT-HGG-2007): a prospective, multicenter, single-arm, phase II trial (2025)
Karremann, Michael ; Perwein, Thomas ; von Bueren, André O. ; Gielen, Gerrit H. ; Benesch, Martin ; Nussbaumer, Gunther ; Friker, Lea L. ; Waha, Andreas ; Sturm, Dominik ; Jones, David T. W. ; Witt, Olaf ; Pfister, Stefan M. ; Eyrich, Matthias ; Thomale, Ulrich W. ; Valentini, Chiara ; Krause, Mechthild ; Van Gool, Stefaan W. ; Frühwald, Michael C. ; Hernaiz-Driever, Pablo ; Ebinger, Martin ; Ebetsberger-Dachs, Georg ; Crazzolara, Roman ; Haberler, Christine ; Sahm, Felix ; Gerber, Nicolas U. ; Classen, Carl Friedrich ; Sträter, Ronald ; Kerl, Kornelius ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Fleischhack, Gudrun ; van Buiren, Miriam ; Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter ; Hagel, Christian ; Calaminus, Gabriele ; Faldum, Andreas ; Warmuth-Metz, Monika ; Bison, Brigitte ; Pietsch, Torsten ; Hoffmann, Marion ; Kwiecien, Robert ; Kramm, Christof M.
Background The HIT-HGG-2007 trial investigated temozolomide (TMZ) radio-chemotherapy for pediatric patients with high-grade gliomas (pHGG) to demonstrate therapeutic non-inferiority compared to previous intensive radio-chemotherapy regimens (HIT-GBM-C/-D). Methods Between June 2009 and December 2016, 456 patients were enrolled into this international, prospective, single-arm, multicenter phase II trial in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland of whom 438 patients were evaluable for confirmatory analysis. Patients from the HIT-GBM-C/-D trials served as historic control (n = 439). Tumors of both cohorts with available tissue were re-classified according to the 2021 WHO classification of CNS tumors (n = 140). Results Regarding event-free-survival (EFS) rate at 6 months, non-inferiority of the HIT-HGG-2007 regimen was confirmed (p = 0.0125). In terms of exploratory analyses, median EFS and overall survival (OS) was 9.5 months (95 % confidence interval [CI95], 8.9–10.4) and 14.7 months (CI95, 13.5–16.3), superior to intensive chemotherapy regimens (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.0328). EFS and OS remained superior after re-classification of tumors according to WHO2021 criteria. TMZ radio-chemotherapy had lower rates of severe hematological, gastrointestinal, and hepatic toxicity compared to HIT-GBM-C/-D. Younger age, WHO grade IV histology, tumor location in the brainstem or basal ganglia, and lower extent of resection were independent adverse risk factors for OS and EFS. MGMT gene promoter methylation status had no impact on EFS and OS. Conclusions The HIT-HGG-2007 trial demonstrated non-inferiority compared with intensive chemotherapy regimens. MGMT promotor methylation status had no impact on survival. Exploratory analysis supports treatment of newly diagnosed non-pontine pHGG according to the HIT-HGG-2007 regimen due to improved EFS and OS rates together with a favorable toxicity profile.
Reply to the letter regarding "Neuroendocrine deficits and weight development before and after proton therapy in children with craniopharyngioma" (2025)
Bischoff, M. ; Beckhaus, J. ; Ahmad Khalil, D. ; Sen, F. ; Frisch, S. ; Koska, B. ; Kiewert, C. ; Bison, Brigitte ; Kortmann, R.-D. ; Friedrich, C. ; Müller, H. L. ; Timmermann, B.
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