Publications by authors named "Antonelli Manila"

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.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on treating high-risk M+ medulloblastoma patients through a specific chemotherapy and radiation protocol, including multiple high-dose drugs and tailored dosages based on age and response to treatment.
  • - Out of 89 enrolled patients, the median age was 8.8 years, and the study reported 5-year overall survival at 75.9% and 15-year event-free survival at 66.5%, with some negative outcomes linked to disease progression during treatment.
  • - Subgroup analysis indicated that patients with Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) tumors and those with certain genetic mutations had significantly worse event-free survival rates compared to other subgroups in the study.
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Primary angiitis of the central nervous system (CNS) is an uncommon inflammatory disorder, with highly variable clinical presentation. It needs to be differentiated from several mimickers, such as CNS involvement in systemic vasculitides, connective tissue disorders, infectious disease, and leukodystrophy as well as neoplastic diseases. The diagnosis requires a combination of clinical and laboratory investigations, multimodal imaging, and histopathological examination, which should be available for confirmation.

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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.

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Article Synopsis
  • The 2021 fifth edition of the WHO Classification of Tumors of the CNS introduced updated naming and grading systems, focusing on integrated diagnoses and detailed reports for better understanding of tumors.
  • This edition put a stronger emphasis on molecular diagnostics alongside traditional methods, introducing new tumor types based on advanced techniques like DNA methylome profiling.
  • The review highlights significant changes in classifying pediatric CNS tumors, detailing relevant molecular alterations that are crucial for diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment strategies important for both patients and oncologists.
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  • Adult Diffuse midline glioma (DMG) is a rare brain tumor in adults, treated primarily with radiotherapy and chemotherapy, but the effectiveness of these treatments has been under-evaluated.
  • A study of 49 patients revealed that while concurrent chemotherapy didn’t improve overall survival (OS), adjuvant temozolomide treatment significantly extended OS from 9.0 to 21.2 months.
  • The results suggest that following initial treatment with radiotherapy, adjuvant chemotherapy can enhance survival outcomes, and for patients who experience disease progression, second-line systemic treatment could offer further survival benefits.
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Background: Intracranial mesenchymal tumors are a rare type of neoplasm (0.3% of all soft tissue tumors) characterized by a fusion of a family gene (usually , rarely ) to family genes (, and ) with a slow-growing and favorable prognosis. Mesenchymal tumors are most frequently localized in the subcutaneous tissue (typically in the limbs and hands) of young adults and have rarely been diagnosed in the central nervous system.

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  • PATZ1-rearranged CNS tumors may or may not be a distinct tumor type, as researchers investigated a pediatric series of 7 cases using various advanced analysis techniques to understand their characteristics.* -
  • MRI results showed these tumors mainly occur in the occipital lobe and have two major types: one resembling glial cells (NET) and another showing spindle cell features (SM), both identified via histologic analysis.* -
  • Although both groups share molecular similarities, gene expression analysis revealed they form two distinct subgroups, with those in the SM group showing important genes related to tumor progression; most patients are disease-free following treatment.*
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Phosphatase and tensin homolog () hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS) is a cancer predisposition syndrome characterized by an increased risk of developing benign and malignant tumors, caused by germline pathogenic variants of the tumour suppressor gene. gene variants often present in childhood with macrocephaly, developmental delay, and/or autism spectrum disorder while tumors and intestinal polyps are commonly detected in adults. PHTS is rarely associated with childhood brain tumors with only two reported cases of medulloblastoma (MB).

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Purpose: To report the long-term outcomes in adult patients with grade 2 IDH-mutant astrocytoma treated with temozolomide (TMZ)-based chemoradiation.

Methods: One hundred and three patients with histologically proven grade 2 astrocytoma received radiation therapy (RT), 50.4-54 Gy in 1.

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Glioblastoma is an aggressive brain tumor with an average life expectancy between 14 and 16 months after diagnosis. The Ki-67 labeling index (LI), a measure of cellular proliferation, is emerging as a prognostic marker in GBM. In this study, we investigated the ultrastructure of glioblastoma tissue from 9 patients with the same molecular profile (adult IDH wild-type glioblastoma, wild-type ATRX, and positive for TP53 expression, GFAP expression, and EGFR overexpression) to find possible ultrastructural features to be used as biomarkers and correlated with the only parameter that differs among our samples, the Ki-67 LI.

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Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumors (AT/RT) are the most common malignant brain tumors manifesting in infancy. They split into four molecular types. The major three (AT/RT-SHH, AT/RT-TYR, and AT/RT-MYC) all carry mutations in SMARCB1, the fourth quantitatively smaller type is characterized by SMARCA4 mutations (AT/RT-SMARCA4).

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Background: First-line therapies for medulloblastoma(MBL) are obtaining higher survival-rates while decreasing late-effects, but treatment at relapse is not standardized. We report here the experience with MBL re-irradiation(re-RT), its timing and outcome in different clinical settings and tumor groups.

Methods: Patient's staging/treatment at diagnosis, histotypes/molecular subgroups, relapse site/s, re-treatments outcome are reported.

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Mesenchymal tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) include numerous entities, with different pathological features and biological behavior. Mesenchymal non-meningothelial tumors are rare and comprise neoplasms that are exclusive to the CNS or show peculiar features when occurring in the CNS compared with other sites. Within this group there are three new entities, classified on the basis of specific molecular alterations and included in the 5th edition of the WHO Classification of CNS Tumors: primary intracranial sarcoma; DICER1-mutant; CIC-rearranged sarcoma; intracranial mesenchymal tumor, FET::CREB fusion-positive.

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Background/aim: In the latest 2021 WHO classification of central nervous system tumours (CNS), gliomas that present isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) mutations are defined as diffuse low-grade gliomas (DLGGs). IDH mutations are commonly observed in this tumour type. The Extent of Resection (EOR) positively influence survival; however, it is still debated whether the predictive value of EOR is independent of the 1p/19q co-deletion.

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Medulloblastomas (MDBs) are classified into molecular groups showing peculiar immunohistochemical and genetic features and distinct DNA methylation profile. Group 3 and group 4 MDBs have the worst prognosis; the former is treated with high-risk protocols and features MYC amplification, whereas the latter receives standard-risk protocols and harbors MYCN amplification. Herein, we report a unique case of MDB showing histological and immunohistochemical features consistent with non-SHH/non-WNT classic MDB, with both MYCN (30% of tumor cells) and MYC (5-10% tumor cells) amplification in distinct subclones of neoplastic cells at fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), characterized by specific patterns.

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Due to its peculiar histopathological findings, pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma (PXA), a rare cerebral tumor of young adults with a slow growth and a good prognosis, resembles to the lytic phase of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by JC polyomavirus (JCPyV). Therefore, the presence of JCPyV DNA was examined in an 11-year-old child with xanthoastrocytoma, WHO grade 3, by quantitative PCR (qPCR) and nested PCR (nPCR) using primers amplifying sequences encoding the N- and C-terminal region of large T antigen (LTAg), the non-coding control region (NCCR), and viral protein 1 (VP1) DNA. The expression of transcripts from LTAg and VP1 genes was also evaluated.

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Pediatric high-grade gliomas represent a heterogeneous group of tumors with a wide variety of molecular features. We performed whole exome sequencing and methylation profiling on matched primary and recurrent tumors from four pediatric patients with hemispheric high-grade gliomas. Genetic analysis showed the presence of some variants shared between primary and recurrent tumors, along with other variants exclusive of primary or recurrent tumors.

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As a relevant element of novelty, the fifth CNS WHO Classification highlights the distinctive pathobiology underlying gliomas arising primarily in children by recognizing for the first time the families of paediatric-type diffuse gliomas, both high-grade and low-grade. This review will focus on the family of paediatric-type diffuse high-grade gliomas, which includes four tumour types: 1) Diffuse midline glioma H3 K27-altered; 2) Diffuse hemispheric glioma H3 G34-mutant; 3) Diffuse paediatric-type high-grade glioma H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype; and 4) Infant-type hemispheric glioma. The essential and desirable diagnostic criteria as well as the entities entering in the differential will be discussed for each tumour type.

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Adult-type diffuse gliomas represent a group of highly infiltrative central nervous system tumors with a prognosis that significantly varies depending on the specific subtype and histological grade. Traditionally, adult-type diffuse gliomas have been classified based on their morphological features with a great interobserver variability and discrepancy in patient survival even within the same histological grade. Over the last few decades, advances in molecular profiling have drastically changed the diagnostic approach and classification of brain tumors leading to the development of an integrated morphological and molecular classification endowed with a more clinically relevant value.

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Objectives: Cerebral hyaline protoplasmic astrocytopathy (HPA) is a clinicopathologic entity characterized by eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions within astrocytes. It has been observed in a subset of patients with early-onset epilepsy, brain malformations, and developmental delay. The exact association of this entity with epilepsy is still unknown.

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Background: To date, this is the only report showing with close and consecutive magnetic resonance images the extremely rapid response of two types of pediatric low-grade gliomas (PLGG) to vemurafenib and its impact on the surgical approach.

Cases Presentation: We report two cases of symptomatic PLGG treated with vemurafenib, a BRAF inhibitor: in a 12-year-old girl it was used as first-line medical treatment, reducing the tumor by 45% within a month and stabilizing to 76% after a year; in a 3-year-old boy with no improvement after SIOP LGG 2004 Protocol, vemurafenib induced in only one week a 34% shrinkage and solved the hydrocephalus, avoiding surgical operation. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Our cases demonstrate how an early molecular diagnosis of BRAF mutations through the neurosurgical biopsy is essential to promptly start targeted therapies.

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Article Synopsis
  • Meningiomas are rare in children and often linked to genetic syndromes that increase tumor risk.
  • Recent findings indicate that -fusions may act as independent drivers for meningioma development in pediatric patients.
  • The study presents a case of an atypical meningioma with a -fusion in a young child, advocating for a comprehensive diagnostic strategy that includes histology, molecular data, imaging, and clinical assessment.
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