4.7 Article

Telomere maintenance and dysfunction predict recurrence in paediatric ependymoma

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 99, Issue 7, Pages 1129-1135

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6604652

Keywords

telomerase; gamma H2AX; child; ependymoma; prognosis

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP 82727]
  2. B.r.a.i.n.c.h.i.l.d. Canada
  3. CIHR/Eli Lilly/CCO

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We have recently described the enzymatic subunit of telomerase (hTERT) as an important prognostic marker for paediatric ependymoma. Because of the lack of good, representative pre-clinical models for ependymoma, we took advantage of our large cohort of ependymoma patients, some with multiple recurrences, to investigate telomere biology in these tumours. Our cohort consisted of 133 ependymomas from 83 paediatric patients and included 31 patients with recurrences. Clinical outcome was measured as overall survival, progression-free survival and response to therapy. In all 133 tumours, hTERT expression correlated with proliferative markers, including MIB-1 index (P<0.0001) and mitotic index (P = 0.005), as well as overall tumour grade (P = 0.001), but not with other markers of anaplasia. There was no correlation between telomere length and hTERT expression or survival. Surprisingly, prior radiation or chemotherapy neither induced sustained DNA damage nor affected telomere maintenance in recurrent tumours. There was an inverse correlation between hTERT expression and telomere dysfunction as measured by gamma H2AX expression (P = 0.016). Combining gH2AX and hTERT expressions could segregate tumours into three different survival groups (log rank, P<0.0001) such that those patients whose tumours expressed hTERT and showed no evidence of DNA damage had the worst outcome. This study emphasises the importance of telomere biology as a prognostic tool and telomerase inhibition as a therapeutic target for paediatric ependymoma. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that analysing tumours as they progress in vivo is a viable approach to studying tumour biology in humans.

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