Augusta, January 19: Scientists of Medical College of Georgia claim that looking directly at the Ribonucleic acid (RNA) of brain tumour cells appears to provide objective, efficient evidence to better classify a tumour and the most effective treatments.
The report published in Scientific Reports says that the new approach introduced by the researchers produces what is termed a transcriptomic profile of the tumour is particularly adept at recognizing some of the most serious of these tumours. Italian Woman Prepares Traditional Stuffed Olives While Undergoing Brain Tumour Operation.
Gliomas are currently classified through histology, primarily the shape, or morphology, pathologists see when they look at the cancerous cells under a microscope, as well as identification of known cancer-causing gene mutations present.
While most patients have both the current classification methods performed, there are sometimes inconsistent findings between the two groups, like traditional pathology finding cancer is a glioblastoma when the mutation study did not and vice versa, and even when two pathologists look at the same brain tumour cells under a microscope, the scientists say.
To more directly look at what a cancer cell is up to, they opted to look at relatively unexplored gene expression, more specifically the one-step downstream RNA, which indicates where the cell is headed. DNA expression equals RNA since DNA makes RNA, which makes proteins, which determine cell function. One way cancer thrives is by altering gene expression, turning some up and others way down or off.
They suspected the new approach would provide additional insight about the tumour, continue to assess the efficacy of existing classification methods and likely identify new treatment targets.
"RNA would be a snapshot of what is high and what is low currently in those glial cells as they are taken out of the body. They are actually looking at how many copies of RNA relevant genes are making. Normally that gene expression determines everything from your hair colour to how much you weigh " says Dr Jin-Xiong She, director of the MCG Center for Biotechnology and Genomic Medicine, Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Genomic Medicine and the study's corresponding author.
The glial cells, whose job is to support neurons, have a tightly regulated gene expression that enables them to do just that. With cancer, one of the first things that happen is how many RNA copies of each gene the cells are making changes and the important cell function changes with it, Trans says.
Transcriptomic profiling starts to like the other methods with a tumour sample from the surgeon, but then it goes through an automated process to extract RNA, which is put into an instrument that can read gene expression levels for the different genes. The massive amounts of data generated than is fed into a machine learning algorithm Tran developed, which computes the most likely glioma subtype and a prognosis associated with it.
They started with The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) program and the Repository of Molecular Brain Neoplasia Data (REMBRANDT), two datasets that had already done the work of looking at RNA and also provided related clinical information, including outcomes on more than 1,400 patients with gliomas. Tran, She and their colleagues used their algorithm to discover patterns of gene expression and used those patterns to classify all glioma patients without any other input. They then compared the three major glioma subtypes that emerged with standard classification methods.
Their transcriptomic classification had about 90% agreement with the traditional approach looking at cells under a microscope and about 93% agreement with looking at genetic mutations, She says. They found about a 16% discrepancy between the two standard measures.
The discrepancies they found between classification methods could be significant for some patients despite close percentages. As an example, patients with a mutation in a gene called IDH, or isocitrate dehydrogenase, most typically have an astrocytoma or oligodendroglioma, which are generally more responsive to treatment and have better survival rates than glioblastomas. However, they also found that even some lower-grade gliomas with this IDH mutation can progress to what's called a secondary glioblastoma, something which may not be found by the other two methods. The IDH mutation is rare in primary glioblastomas, she notes.
Using the standard techniques, which look at a snapshot in time, these astrocytomas that progress to more lethal glioblastomas were classified as a less serious tumour in 27 patients. "That progression phenomenon is known but our technique is better at identifying those cases," Tran says.
Further analysis also found that about 20% of the worse-prognosis patients had mutations in the promoter region of the TERT gene. The TERT gene is best known for making telomerase, enzymes that enable our chromosomes to stay a healthy length, a length known to decrease with age. TERT function is known to be hijacked by cancer to enable the endless cell proliferation that is a cancer hallmark. This mutation is not usually present in a glioma that starts out as a more aggressive glioblastoma and implicates a mutation in the TERT promoter is important in glioma progression, according to scientists.
These findings also point to strengths of the different classification methods, in this case suggesting that classification by mutation may not pick up these most aggressive brain tumours rather their new transcriptomic method, as well as the older approach of looking at the cancer cells under a microscope, are better at making this important distinction.
All these variations have groups like the World Health Organization asking for better ways to determine poor prognosis IDH patients, they write. Other variations include some glioblastomas with the normal IDH gene carry one of the worse prognoses for gliomas, but there is a subgroup of glioblastomas that act more like astrocytes and tend to carry a better prognosis.
In addition to the accuracy of prognosis, a second way to assess a tumour classification method is whether it points you toward better treatment options. "Right now, if anyone gives us RNA expression data from patients anywhere in the world, we can quickly tell them which glioma subtype it most likely is," Tran says. Gliomas are tumours of glial cells -- which include astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and microglial cells -- brain cells which outnumber neurons and whose normal job is to surround and support neurons.
Identification of IDH gene mutations in the cells has already made standard glioma classification more systematic, the scientists say. The mutation can be identified by either staining the biopsy slide or by sequencing for it.
Much progress also has been made in using machine learning to automate and objectify cancer diagnosis and subtyping they write, including glioblastomas. Glioblastomas have been characterized using transcriptome-based analysis but not all gliomas, like the current study.
Like most genes, the IDH gene normally has many jobs in the body, including processing glucose and other metabolites for a variety of cell types. But when mutated, it can become destructive to cells, producing factors like reactive oxygen species, which damage the DNA and contribute to cancer and other diseases. These mutations can result in age and/or environmental exposures. IDH inhibitors are in clinical trials for a variety of cancers including gliomas.
Increasing insight also is emerging into the significant DNA methylation that occurs in cancer, which alters gene expression, resulting in changes like silencing tumour suppressor genes and producing additional cancer-causing genetic mutations.