4.6 Review

Clinical implications of the 2021 edition of the WHO classification of central nervous system tumours

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS NEUROLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages 515-529

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41582-022-00679-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Northwestern University [P50CA221747]
  2. Lou and Jean Malnati Brain Tumour Institute at Northwestern
  3. [R01NS102669]
  4. [R01NS117104]
  5. [R01NS118039]

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The fifth edition of the WHO classification of CNS tumours, published in 2021, incorporates major changes in the classification system. This new edition includes more molecular alterations in tumor diagnosis and reorganizes the classification of gliomas and ependymomas. Several new tumor entities, especially pediatric tumors, are added to the 2021 classification. This significant revision will have a major impact on the diagnosis and treatment of CNS tumors.
The fifth edition of the WHO classification of CNS tumours was published in 2021. Here, Horbinski and colleagues summarize the main changes in this new edition and discuss how each change will affect post-surgical treatment, clinical trial enrolment and cooperative studies. A new edition of the WHO classification of tumours of the CNS was published in 2021. Although the previous edition of this classification was published just 5 years earlier, in 2016, rapid advances in our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of CNS tumours, including the diversity of clinically relevant molecular types and subtypes, necessitated a new classification system. Compared with the 2016 scheme, the new classification incorporates even more molecular alterations into the diagnosis of many tumours and reorganizes gliomas into adult-type diffuse gliomas, paediatric-type diffuse low-grade and high-grade gliomas, circumscribed astrocytic gliomas, and ependymal tumours. A number of new entities are incorporated into the 2021 classification, especially tumours that preferentially or exclusively arise in the paediatric population. Such a substantial revision of the WHO scheme will have major implications for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with CNS tumours. In this Perspective, we summarize the main changes in the classification of diffuse and circumscribed gliomas, ependymomas, embryonal tumours and meningiomas, and discuss how each change will influence post-surgical treatment, clinical trial enrolment and cooperative studies. Although the 2021 WHO classification of CNS tumours is a major conceptual advance, its implementation on a routine clinical basis presents some challenges that will require innovative solutions.

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