Prospective feasibility and safety assessment of surgical biopsy for patients with newly diagnosed diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma

Nalin Gupta(University of California, San Francisco), Liliana Goumnerova(Boston Children's Hospital), Peter Manley(Boston Children's Hospital), Susan Chi(Boston Children's Hospital), Donna Neuberg(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Mäneka Puligandla(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Jason Fangusaro(Northwestern University), Stewart Goldman(Northwestern University), Tadanori Tomita(Northwestern University), Tord D. Alden(Northwestern University), Arthur J. DiPatri(Northwestern University), Joshua B. Rubin(St. Louis Children's Hospital), Karen Gauvain(St. Louis Children's Hospital), David D. Limbrick(St. Louis Children's Hospital), Jeffrey R. Leonard(St. Louis Children's Hospital), J. Geyer(Seattle Children's Hospital), Sarah Leary(Seattle Children's Hospital), Samuel R. Browd(Seattle Children's Hospital), Zhihong Wang(Wayne State University), Sandeep Sood(Wayne State University), Anne Bendel(Children's Minnesota), Mahmoud G. Nagib(Children's Minnesota), Sharon L. Gardner(City University of New York), Matthias A. Karajannis(City University of New York), David H. Harter(City University of New York), Kanyalakshmi Ayyanar(University of Louisville), William Gump(University of Louisville), Daniel C. Bowers(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Bradley E. Weprin(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Tobey J. MacDonald(Emory University), Dolly Aguilera(Emory University), Barunashish Brahma(Emory University), Nathan Robison(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Erin N. Kiehna(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Mark D. Krieger(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Eric Sandler(Nemours Children’s Clinic), Philipp R. Aldana(Nemours Children’s Clinic), Ziad Khatib(Miami Children's Hospital), John Ragheb(Miami Children's Hospital), Sanjiv Bhatia(Miami Children's Hospital), Sabine Mueller(University of California, San Francisco), Anu Banerjee(University of California, San Francisco), Amy‐Lee Bredlau(Medical University of South Carolina), S. Gururangan(Duke Medical Center), Herbert E. Fuchs(Duke Medical Center), Kenneth J. Cohen(Johns Hopkins University), George I. Jallo(Johns Hopkins University), Kathleen Dorris(Children's Hospital Colorado), Michael Handler(Children's Hospital Colorado), Melanie Comito(Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center), Mark S. Dias(Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center), Kellie J. Nazemi(Oregon Health & Science University), Lissa Baird(Oregon Health & Science University), Jeff Murray(Cook Children's Medical Center), Neal I. Lindeman(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Jason L. Hornick(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Hayley Malkin(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Claire Sinai(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Lianne Greenspan(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Karen Wright(Boston Children's Hospital), Michael D. Prados(University of California, San Francisco), Pratiti Bandopadhayay(Broad Institute), Keith L. Ligon(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Mark W. Kieran(Boston Children's Hospital)
Neuro-Oncology
May 1, 2018
Cited by 133Open Access
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Abstract

Background: Diagnosis of diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) has relied on imaging studies, since the appearance is pathognomonic, and surgical risk was felt to be high and unlikely to affect therapy. The DIPG Biology and Treatment Study (DIPG-BATS) reported here incorporated a surgical biopsy at presentation and stratified subjects to receive FDA-approved agents chosen on the basis of specific biologic targets. Methods: Subjects were eligible for the trial if the clinical features and imaging appearance of a newly diagnosed tumor were consistent with a DIPG. Surgical biopsies were performed after enrollment and prior to definitive treatment. All subjects were treated with conventional external beam radiotherapy with bevacizumab, and then stratified to receive bevacizumab with erlotinib or temozolomide, both agents, or neither agent, based on O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase status and epidermal growth factor receptor expression. Whole-genome sequencing and RNA sequencing were performed but not used for treatment assignment. Results: Fifty-three patients were enrolled at 23 institutions, and 50 underwent biopsy. The median age was 6.4 years, with 24 male and 29 female subjects. Surgical biopsies were performed with a specified technique and no deaths were attributed to the procedure. Two subjects experienced grade 3 toxicities during the procedure (apnea, n = 1; hypertension, n = 1). One subject experienced a neurologic deficit (left hemiparesis) that did not fully recover. Of the 50 tumors biopsied, 46 provided sufficient tissue to perform the study assays (92%, two-stage exact binomial 90% CI: 83%-97%). Conclusions: Surgical biopsy of DIPGs is technically feasible, associated with acceptable risks, and can provide biologic data that can inform treatment decisions.


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