Pascale Varlet

Pascale Varlet
Centre Hospitalier Sainte Anne · 75014

MD, PhD

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552
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Publications

Publications (552)
Article
Full-text available
Purpose Grade 3 meningiomas, although rare, are associated with high morbidity and mortality. The respective impacts of extent of surgical resection and adjuvant radiotherapy are still debated. Moreover, anaplastic meningiomas are studied in heterogenous cohort of de novo and progressive anaplastic tumors. Methods We conducted a retrospective mult...
Article
Full-text available
Diffuse pediatric-type high-grade gliomas (pedHGG), H3- and IDH-wildtype, encompass three main DNA-methylation-based subtypes: pedHGG-MYCN, pedHGG-RTK1A/B/C, and pedHGG-RTK2A/B. Since their first description in 2017 tumors of pedHGG-RTK2A/B have not been comprehensively characterized and clinical correlates remain elusive. In a recent series of ped...
Article
Background Following large resection, proposing a watch-and-wait strategy in selected grade 3 glioma, isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-mutant patients is an emerging practice. We compared the watch-and-wait approach to the standard postoperative adjuvant oncological treatment for grade 3 gliomas, IDH-mutant. Methods Observational, retrospective, sin...
Article
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) H3 K27-altered are incurable grade 4 gliomas and represent a major challenge in neuro-oncology. This tumor type is classified in four subtypes by the 2021 edition of the WHO Classification of the Central Nervous System tumors. However, we recently identified a new subtype of DMG by assembling a retrospective cohort of...
Article
Central nervous system (CNS) tumors with either BCOR internal tandem duplication (BCOR ITD) or gene fusions involving BCOR/BCORL1 (BCOR FUS) are recognized as tumor types with characteristic molecular and clinical features but lacking clear therapeutic guidance. In an extensive international effort, we compiled a retrospective cohort of 229 (148 BC...
Article
Aims FGFR ‐fused central nervous system (CNS) tumours are rare and are usually within the glioneuronal and neuronal tumours or the paediatric‐type diffuse low‐grade glioma spectrum. Among this spectrum, FGFR2 fusion has been documented in tumours classified by DNA‐methylation profiling as polymorphous low‐grade neuroepithelial tumours of the young...
Article
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CIC fusions have been described in two different central nervous system (CNS) tumor entities. On one hand, fusions of CIC or ATXN1 genes belonging to the same complex of transcriptional repressors, were reported in the CIC‐rearranged, sarcoma (SARC‐CIC). The diagnosis of this tumor type, which was recently added to the World Health Organization (WH...
Article
Malignant rhabdoid tumors (MRT) are rare aggressive tumors of infancy characterized by the biallelic inactivation of SMARCB1. Their lineage of origin remains uncertain, but increasing evidence suggest a neural-crest origin. By analyzing the transcriptome of MRT occurring in peripheral and cranial nerves, we observe that their expression profiling w...
Article
OBJECTIVE Glioblastoma, isocitrate dehydrogenase ( IDH ) – wildtype is the most aggressive glioma with poor outcomes. The authors explored survival rates and factors associated with long-term survival in patients harboring a glioblastoma, IDH -wildtype. METHODS In an observational, retrospective, single-center study, the authors examined the medic...
Article
Focal Cortical Dysplasia, Hemimegalencephaly and Cortical Tuber are pediatric epileptogenic malformations of cortical development (MCDs) frequently pharmaco-resistant and mostly surgically treated by the resection of epileptic cortex. Availability of cortical resection samples allowed significant mechanistic discoveries directly from human material...
Article
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Purpose Supratentorial (ST) ependymoma subgroups are defined by two different fusions with different prognoses. Astroblastomas, MN1-altered, have ependymal-like histopathologic features and represent a differential diagnosis in children. We hypothesized that ZFTA-fused ependymoma and YAP1-fused ependymoma on the one hand, and astroblastoma, MN1-alt...
Article
Background Constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) is a cancer predisposition due to biallelic mutations in one of the mismatch repair (MMR) genes associated with early onset of cancers, especially high-grade gliomas. Our aim was to decipher the molecular specificities of these gliomas. Methods Clinical, histopathological, and whole exom...
Article
Children with constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) syndrome have an increased risk of high-grade gliomas (HGG), and brain imaging abnormalities. This study analyzes brain imaging features in CMMRD syndrome children versus those with HGG without CMMRD. Retrospective comparative analysis of brain imaging in 30 CMMRD children (20 boys, me...
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A novel histomolecular tumor of the central nervous system (CNS), the “diffuse glioneuronal tumor with oligodendroglioma-like features and nuclear clusters (DGONC),” has recently been identified, based on a distinct DNA methylation profile and has been added to the 2021 World Health Organization Classification of CNS Tumors. This glioneuronal tumor...
Article
BACKGROUND Since 2016, the WHO classification of CNS tumors groups all midline gliomas with H3K27me3 loss under the term diffuse midline glioma (DMG), H3K27-altered. Molecular characteristics enable their sub-classification based on driver mutations, co-driver mutations and epigenetic alterations. Predominantly studied in the pons (Diffuse Intrinsi...
Article
BACKGROUND Embryonal tumors with PLAGL1 and PLAGL2 amplification (ET, PLAGL) display substantial clinical heterogeneity regarding applied treatment and outcomes. As a recently-defined entity, the spectrum of tumor-driving PLAG-family alterations is not yet fully elucidated. METHODS We analyzed clinical and MRI data from patients with ET, PLAGL. Se...
Article
BACKGROUND The “central nervous system primitive neuroectodermal tumor” (CNS-PNET) nosology was removed from the World Health Organization (WHO) classification after DNA methylation profiling and new tumor entities characterized by specific recurrent genetic alterations were described. The aim of this study was to re-evaluate the diagnosis of CNS-P...
Article
INTRODUCTION Medulloblastoma (MB) is one of the most prevalent embryonal malignant brain tumors, divided into four distinct molecular subgroups (WNT, SHH, group 3, and group 4) with its individual prognosis. A more extensive classification of MB has recently been provided, identifying numerous subtypes, some with poor prognosis, leading to a signif...
Article
BACKGROUND AsiDNA is a synthetic cholesterol-oligodeoxyribonucleotide conjugate, inducing false DNA damage signaling, which prevents DNA repair in tumor cells. AsiDNA therefore increases the vulnerability of tumor cells to irradiation without increasing toxicity in healthy tissues. Preclinical data showed encouraging results of AsiDNA combined to i...
Article
BACKGROUND Diffuse pediatric-type high-grade gliomas (pedHGG), H3-wildtype and IDH-wildtype, encompass three main methylome-based subclasses: pedHGG-MYCN, -RTK1A/B/C, and -RTK2A/B. Since their first description in 2017, tumors of pedHGG-RTK2A/B have not been further characterized and their clinical significance is unknown. METHODS A not yet publis...
Article
Full-text available
A novel methylation class, “neuroepithelial tumor, with PLAGL1 fusion” (NET-PLAGL1), has recently been described, based on epigenetic features, as a supratentorial pediatric brain tumor with recurrent histopathological features suggesting an ependymal differentiation. Because of the recent identification of this neoplastic entity, few histopatholog...
Article
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Meningioangiomatosis (MAM) remains a poorly understood lesion responsible for epileptic disease. In the past, MAM was primarily described in the context of neurofibromatosis type 2 before being mainly reported sporadically. Moreover, the malformative or tumoral nature is still debated. Because a subset of MAM are associated with meningiomas, some a...
Article
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) H3 K27-altered are incurable grade 4 gliomas and represent a major challenge in neuro-oncology. This tumor type is now classified in four subtypes by the 2021 edition of the WHO Classification of the Central Nervous System (CNS) tumors. However, the H3.3-K27M subgroup still appears clinically and molecularly heterogeno...
Article
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) are pediatric tumors with negligible two-year survival after diagnosis characterized by their ability to infiltrate the central nervous system. In the hope of controlling the local growth and slowing the disease all patients receive radiotherapy. However, distant progression occurs frequently in DMG patients. Current c...
Article
Full-text available
OBJECTIVE The 2021 WHO classification of CNS tumors has refined the definition of adult-type diffuse gliomas without 1p19q codeletion. Nevertheless, the aggressiveness of gliomas is based exclusively on histomolecular criteria performed on a limited sample of the tumor. The authors aimed to assess whether the spontaneous radiographic tumor growth r...
Article
Aims: The SOX10 transcription factor is important for the maturation of oligodendrocytes involved in central nervous system (CNS) myelination. Currently, very little information exists about its expression and potential use in CNS tumour diagnoses. The aim of our study was to characterize the expression of SOX10 in a large cohort of CNS tumours an...
Article
Full-text available
Erythroblastic sarcoma (ES) (previously called chloroma or granulocytic sarcoma) are rare hematological neoplams characterized by the proliferation of myeloid blasts at extramedullary sites, and primarily involve the skin and soft tissue of middle-aged adults. ES may be concomitant with or secondary to myeloid neoplasms (mostly acute myeloid leukem...
Article
Pilocytic astrocytomas (PA) typically exhibit distinct clinical, radiological, histopathological, and genetic features. DNA-methylation profiling distinguishes PA according to their location (infratentorial, midline, hemispheric, or spinal). In the hemispheric location, distinguishing PA from glioneuronal tumors remains a common diagnostic challeng...
Article
Full-text available
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) H3 K27-altered are incurable grade 4 gliomas and represent a major challenge in neuro-oncology. This tumour type is now classified in four subtypes by the 2021 edition of the WHO Classification of the Central Nervous System (CNS) tumours. However, the H3.3-K27M subgroup still appears clinically and molecularly heteroge...
Article
Objective: Only one phase III prospective randomized study, published in 2006, has assessed the performance of 5-aminolevulinic acid (5-ALA) fluorescence-guided surgery (FGS) for glioblastoma resection. The aim of the RESECT study was to compare the onco-functional results associated with 5-ALA fluorescence and with white-light conventional micros...
Article
Full-text available
Differential diagnosis between constitutional mismatch repair deficiency (CMMRD) and neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1 ) is crucial as treatment and surveillance differ. We report the case of a girl with a clinical diagnosis of sporadic NF1 who developed a glioblastoma. Immunohistochemistry for MMR proteins identified PMS2 loss in tumour and normal cel...
Article
Full-text available
Background Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) are pediatric tumors with negligible two-year survival after diagnosis characterized by their ability to infiltrate the central nervous system. In the hope of controlling the local growth and slowing the disease all patients receive radiotherapy. However, distant progression occurs frequently in DMG patients...
Article
Objectives Posterior fossa ependymoma group A (EPN_PFA) and group B (EPN_PFB) can be distinguished by their DNA methylation and give rise to different prognoses. We compared the MRI characteristics of EPN_PFA and EPN_PFB at presentation.Methods Preoperative imaging of 68 patients with posterior fossa ependymoma from two centers was reviewed by thre...
Article
Full-text available
Patients with H3K27M-mutant diffuse midline glioma (DMG) have no proven effective therapies. ONC201 has recently demonstrated efficacy in these patients, but the mechanism behind this finding remains unknown. We assessed clinical outcomes, tumor sequencing, and tissue/cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) correlate samples from patients treated in two complete...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Liquid biopsies are revolutionary tools used to detect tumor-specific genetic alterations in body fluids, including the use of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) for molecular diagnosis in cancer patients. In brain tumors, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cfDNA might be more informative than plasma cfDNA. Here, we assess the use of CSF cfDNA in pediatric...
Article
Recent epigenomic analyses have revealed the existence of a new DNA methylation class (MC) of infant-type hemispheric glioma (IHG). Like desmoplastic infantile ganglioglioma/astrocytoma (DIG/DIA), these tumors mainly affect infants and are supratentorial. While DIG/DIA is characterized by BRAF or RAF1 alterations, IHG has been shown to have recepto...
Article
Full-text available
Gliomatosis cerebri (GC), a radiologically defined highly infiltrating supratentorial glioma, is no longer considered a distinct entity since the 2016 WHO classification for tumors of the central nervous system (CNS). So far, neither prognostic factors, nor molecular GC-associated features have been established. We conducted a multinational retrosp...
Article
Full-text available
Accurate identification of brain tumour molecular subgroups is increasingly important. We aimed to establish the most accurate and reproducible ependymoma subgroup biomarker detection techniques, across 147 cases from International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) Ependymoma II trial participants, enrolled in the pan-European “Biomarkers of Epe...
Article
Full-text available
Gliomatosis cerebri (GC) is a rare, lethal glioma that is radiologically diagnosed and characterised by its diffuse infiltration throughout the cerebral lobes of the brain. It is no longer recognised as a separate entity by the WHO classification, but its growth pattern and invasive phenotype differ from other types of glioma. In order to understan...
Article
Full-text available
Angiocentric glioma mainly occurs in children and young adults. It is associated with a good prognosis (CNS WHO grade 1). Molecularly, most angiocentric gliomas have a MYB-QKI fusion. Histologically, angiocentric gliomas were initially defined by an angiocentric growth of the tumor cells. However, we noticed that epigenetically defined angiocentric...
Article
Full-text available
Diffuse midline gliomas H3K27-altered are pediatric tumors associated with dismal survival after diagnosis that are characterized by their ability to infiltrate the entire central nervous system. We show that the extent of tumor invasion and metastatic progression represent critical adverse prognostic factors affecting the survival of DMG patients....
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Liquid biopsies are revolutionary tools to detect tumor-specific genetic alterations in body fluids, and cell-free DNA (cfDNA) can be used for molecular diagnosis in cancer patients. In brain tumors cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cfDNA might be more informative than plasma cfDNA. Here, we assess the use of CSF cfDNA in pediatric embryonal br...
Article
10003 Background: DIPG is the most aggressive brain cancer in children and adolescents with a median survival of 9 months. Surgery is not possible due to the invasive nature of the disease in a critical area of the brain; only radiotherapy has shown a transient palliative effect on disease progression and no adjuvant therapy has proven to increase...
Article
The fifth edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System has identified many new tumor types and has established, for the first time, essential and desirable diagnostic criteria for each of them. Among these, genetic alterations play an important role associated with morphology. For the first t...
Article
Objective: Distinguishing tumor recurrence from therapy-induced imaging changes (TIIC) on brain MRI in children treated for primary malignant brain tumors may be challenging. The authors aimed to assess the diagnostic ability of multimodal MRI in differentiating TIIC from tumor recurrence. Methods: The authors retrospectively included children w...
Article
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Nowadays, the ability to diagnose brain tumors intraoperatively and delineate their margins, as accurately as possible, is of primordial importance during surgery. However, the exact tumor boundaries and targets are difficult to find due to the similar visual appearances especially at the margins, leading in many cases to poor surgical outcomes and...
Article
Purpose: Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) aberrations have been identified in pediatric type infant gliomas, but their occurrence across age groups, functional effects, and treatment response have not been broadly established. Experimental Design: We performed a comprehensive analysis of ALK expression and genomic aberrations in both newly-generate...
Article
Full-text available
Pediatric neoplasms in the central nervous system (CNS) show extensive clinical and molecular heterogeneity and are fundamentally different from those occurring in adults. Molecular genetic testing contributes to accurate diagnosis and enables an optimal clinical management of affected children. Here, we investigated a rare, molecularly distinct ty...
Article
Full-text available
Glioneuronal tumors are a heterogenous group of CNS neoplasms that can be challenging to accurately diagnose. Molecular methods are highly useful in classifying these tumors—distinguishing precise classes from their histological mimics and identifying previously unrecognized types of tumors. Using an unsupervised visualization approach of DNA methy...
Article
Full-text available
Background Accurate identification of brain tumour molecular subgroups is increasingly important. We aimed to establish the most accurate and reproducible ependymoma subgroup biomarker detection techniques, across 147 cases from International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) Ependymoma II trial participants, enrolled in the pan-European “Biomar...
Article
Purpose: Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) aberrations have been identified in pediatric type infant gliomas, but their occurrence across age groups, functional effects, and treatment response have not been broadly established. Experimental design: We performed a comprehensive analysis of ALK expression and genomic aberrations in both newly gener...
Article
Full-text available
The Central Nervous System (CNS) tumor with BCOR internal tandem duplication (ITD) has recently been added as a novel embryonal histomolecular tumor type to the 2021 World Health Organization (WHO) Classification of CNS Tumors. In addition, other CNS tumors harboring a BCOR/BCORL1 fusion, which are defined by a distinct DNA-methylation profile, hav...
Article
Full-text available
The fifth edition of the World Health Organization Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System (CNS) now includes mesenchymal tumors that occur uniquely or frequently in the CNS. Moreover, this version has aligned the terminology of mesenchymal tumors with their soft tissue counterparts. New tumor types have been added, such as the “intr...
Article
Full-text available
Background Gliomas with FGFR3::TACC3 fusion mainly occur in adults, display pathological features of glioblastomas (GB) and are usually classified as glioblastoma, IDH -wildtype. However, cases demonstrating pathological features of low-grade glioma (LGG) lead to difficulties in classification and clinical management. We report a series of 8 GB and...
Article
Background: Diffuse gliomas are the most frequent neoplasms in adolescent and young adults (AYAs), especially high-grade gliomas, which have the highest mortality rate. Recent histo-molecular advances are in favour of specialized therapeutic management of AYA patients, which we have analysed in this comprehensive review of the literature. Summary...
Article
Background: Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) causes drug-resistant epilepsy in children that can be cured surgically, but the lesions are often unseen by imaging. Objective: To assess the efficiency of arterial spin labeling (ASL), voxel-based-morphometry (VBM), fMRI electroencephalography (EEG), resting-state regional homogeneity (ReHo), 18F-fluo...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Accurate identification of brain tumour molecular subgroups is increasingly important. We aimed to establish the most accurate and reproducible ependymoma subgroup biomarker detection techniques, across 147 cases from International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) Ependymoma II trial participants, enrolled in the pan-European 'Bioma...
Article
Full-text available
Aims: NTRK gene fusions have been described in a wide variety of central nervous system (CNS) and soft tissue tumors, including the provisional tumor type "spindle cell neoplasm, NTRK-rearranged" (SCN-NTRK), added to the 2020 World Health Organization Classification of Soft Tissue Tumors. Because of histopathological and molecular overlaps with ot...
Article
Full-text available
Lobar hematomas represent around half of all supratentorial hemorrhages and have high mortality and morbidity. Their management depends on the underlying cause. Apart from local causes such as vascular malformation, which are rare and can usually be easily excluded thanks to imaging, the vast majority of lobar hematomas equally frequently result fr...
Article
Primary intracranial sarcoma DICER1-mutant is a rare and newly recognized tumor type introduced in the 2021 WHO Classification of Central Nervous System Tumors. It is defined as a spindle cell sarcoma dysplaying eosinophilic intracytoplasmic globules, myogenic differentiation, and DICER1 gene mutation, either somatic or germline. Most reported case...