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Oligodendrogliomas are a type of glioma that are believed to
originate from the oligodendrocytes of the brain or from a glial
precursor cell. They occur primarily in adults (9.4% of all primary
brain and central nervous system tumors) and are only rarely found in
children (4% of all primary brain tumors). The median age of
diagnosis for oligodendroglioma is 41 years of age.
Contents [hide]
1 Etiology
2 Symptoms
3 Microscopic Appearance
4 Histopathological Grading
5 Molecular genetics
6 Prognosis & treatment
7 References
[edit] Etiology
The aetiology of oligodendrogliomas is unknown. Some studies have
linked oligodendroglioma with a viral cause, a single case report has
linked oligodendroglioma to irradiation of pituitary adenoma.
[edit] Symptoms
In anywhere from fifty to eighty percent of cases, the first symptom
of an oligodendroglioma is the onset of seizure activity. They occur
mainly in the frontal lobe thus affecting personality. Headaches
combined with increased intracranial pressure are also a common
symptom of oligodendroglioma. Depending on the location of the tumor,
any neurological deficit can be induced, from visual loss, motor
weakness and cognitive decline. A Computed Tomography (CT) or
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scan is necessary to characterize
the anatomy of this tumor (size, location, heter/homogeneity).
However, final diagnosis of this tumor, like most tumors, relies on
histopathologic examination (biopsy examination).
[edit] Microscopic Appearance
Oligodendrogliomas cannot currently be differentiated from other
brain lesions solely by their clinical or radiographic appearance. As
such, a brain biopsy is the only method of definitive diagnosis.
Oligodendrogliomas recapitulate the appearance of the normal resident
oligodendroglia of the brain. (Their name derives from the Greek
roots 'oligo' meaning few and 'dendro' meaning
trees.) They are generally composed of cells with small
to slightly enlarged round nuclei with dark, compact nuclei and a
small amount of eosinophilic cytoplasm. They are often referred to as
"fried egg" cells due to their histologic appearance. They
appear as a monotonous population of mildly enlarged round cells
infiltrating normal brain parenchyma and producing vague nodules.
Although the tumor may appear to be vaguely circumscribed, it is by
definition a diffusely infiltrating tumor.
Classically they tend to have a vasculature of finely branching
capillaries that may take on a chicken wire appearance .
When invading grey matter structures such as cortex, the neoplastic
oligodendrocytes tend to cluster around neurons exhibiting a
phenomenon referred to as perineuronal satellitosis.
Oligodendrogliomas may invade preferentially around vessels or under
the pial surface of the brain.
Oligodendrogliomas must be differentiated from the more common
astrocytoma. Non-classical variants and combined tumors of both
oligodendroglioma and astrocytoma differentiation are seen, making
this distinction controversial between different neuropathology
groups. In the US, in general, neuropathologists trained on the West
Coast are more liberal in the diagnosis of oligodendroliomas than
either East Coast or Midwest trained neuropathologists who render the
diagnosis of oligodendroglioma for only classic variants. Molecular
diagnostics may make this differentiation obsolete in the future.
Other glial and glioneuronal tumors with which they are often
confused due to their monotonous round cell appearance include
pilocytic astrocytoma, central neurocytoma, the so-called
dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor, or occasionally ependymoma.
[edit] Histopathological Grading
The histopathologic grading of oligodendrogliomas is controversial.
Currently the most commonly used grading schema is based on year 2007
World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines. Oligodendrogliomas are
generally dichotomized into grade II (low grade) and grade III (high
grade) tumors. The designation of grade III oligodendroglioma (high
grade) generally subsumes the previous diagnoses of anaplastic or
malignant oligodendroglioma.
Unfortunately, the WHO guidelines include subjective criteria in
differentiating grade II and grade III tumors including the
appreciation of significant hypercellularity and
pleomorphism in the higher grade lesion. In addition, the presence of
low mitotic activity, vascular proliferation and necrosis, including
pseudopallisading necrosis are insufficient by themselves to elevate
the grade of these tumors. This leads to inevitable interobserver
variability in diagnosis by pathologists. The ultimate responsibility
for making treatment decisions and interpretation of these diagnoses
lies with the oncologist in consultation with the patient and their family.
It has been proposed that WHO guidelines should contain a category
for grade IV oligodendrogliomas which essentially appear to be glial
neoplasms with overwhelming features of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)
arising from known lower grade oligodendrogliomas or GBM with a
significant proportion of oligodendroglial differentiation. The
diagnostic ultility of this latter category is uncertain as these
tumors may behave either like glioblastoma or grade III
oligodendrogliomas. As such, this is an exceptionally unusual diagnosis.
The updated WHO guidelines published in 2007 recommends classifying
such tumors for the time being as glioblastoma with
oligodendroglioma component. [1] It remains to be established
whether or not these tumors carry a better prognosis than standard glioblastomas.
[edit] Molecular genetics
By far, the most common structural deformity found is co-deletion of
chromosomal arms 1p and 19q. The high frequency of co-deletion
(60-80%) is a striking feature of this glial tumour, and is
considered as a "genetic signature" of oligodendroglioma.
1p/19q deletion has been correlated with both chemosensitivity and
improved prognosis in oligodendrogliomas.[2][3] A t(1;19)(q10;p10)
translocation mediates the combined deletions of 1p and 19q. The gene
products lost as a consequence of this codeletion may include
mediators of resistance to genotoxic therapies. Alternatively, 1p/19q
loss might be an early oncogenic lesion promoting the formation of
glial neoplasms, which retain high sensitivity to genotoxic stress.
[edit] Prognosis & treatment
Oligodendrogliomas are generally felt to be incurable using current
treatments. However compared to the more common astrocytomas, they
are slowly growing with prolonged survival. In one series, median
survival times for oligodendrogliomas were 11.6 years for grade II
and 3.5 years for grade III.[4] Because of the indolent nature of
these tumors and the potential morbidity associated with
neurosurgery, chemotherapy and radiation therapy, most
neurooncologists will initially pursue a course of watchful waiting
and treat patients symptomatically. Symptomatic treatment often
includes the use of anticonvulsants for seizures and steroids for
brain swelling. PCV chemotherapy (Procarbazine, CCNU and Vincristine)
has been shown to be effective and is currently the most commonly
used chemotherapy regimen used for treating anaplastic
oligodendrogliomas.[5] Temozolomide is a common chemotheraputic drug
to which oligodendrogliomas appear to be quite sensitive. It is often
used as a first line therapy.
Because of their diffusely infiltrating nature, oligodendrogliomas
cannot be completely resected and are not curable by surgical
excision. If the tumor mass compresses adjacent brain structures, a
neurosurgeon will typically remove as much of the tumor as he or she
can without damaging other critical, healthy brain structures.
Surgery may be followed up by chemotherapy, radiation, or a mix of
both. Oligodendrogliomas, like all other infiltrating gliomas, have a
very high (almost uniform) rate of recurrence and gradually increase
in grade over time. Recurrent tumors are generally treated with more
aggressive chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Recently, stereotactic
surgery has proven successful in treating small tumors that have been
diagnosed early.
Long-term survival is reported in a minority of patients.[6] With
aggressive treatment and close monitoring, it is possible to outlive
the typical life expectancies for both low grade and high grade
oligodendrogliomas. In rare cases, patients have survived for up to
fifteen years post-diagnosis. Westergaards study (1997) showed
that patients younger than 20 years had a median survival of 17.5
years.[7] Another study shows a 34% survival rate after 20 years. [8]
[edit] References
^ Louis D, Ohgaki H, Wiestler O, 'et al (2007). "The 2007 WHO
Classification of Tumours of the Central Nervous System". Acta
Neuropathologica 114 (2): 97-109. doi:10.1007/s00401-007-0243-4. PMID 17618441.
^ Laigle-Donadey F, Benouaich-Amiel A, Hoang-Xuan K, Sanson M (2005).
"[Molecular biology of oligodendroglial tumors]" (in
French). Neuro-Chirurgie 51 (3-4 Pt 2): 260-8. PMID 16292170.
^ Walker C, Haylock B, Husband D, et al (2006). "Clinical use of
genotype to predict chemosensitivity in oligodendroglial tumors".
Neurology 66 (11): 1661-7. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000218270.12495.9a.
PMID 16769937.
^ Ohgaki H, Kleihues P. Population-based studies on incidence,
survival rates, and genetic alterations in astrocytic and
oligodendroglial gliomas. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol. 2005
Jun;64(6):479-89. PMID: 15977639
^ Herbert H. Engelhard, M.D., Ph.D., Ana Stelea, M.D., and Arno
Mundt, M.D.[1] p.452
^ Tatter SB. Recurrent malignant glioma in adults. Curr Treat Options
Oncol. 2002 Dec;3(6):509-24. PMID: 12392640,
^ Herbert H. Engelhard, M.D., Ph.D., Ana Stelea, M.D., and Arno
Mundt, M.D.[2] p.449
^ Feigenberg SJ, Amdur RJ, Morris CG, Mendenhall WM, Marcus RB,
Friedman WA (2003). "Oligodendroglioma: does deferring treatment
compromise outcome?". Am. J. Clin. Oncol. 26 (3): e60-6. doi:10.1097/01.COC.0000072507.25834.D6.
PMID 12796617.
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