4.7 Article

Extracellular matrix composition defines an ultra-high-risk group of neuroblastoma within the high-risk patient cohort

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 115, Issue 4, Pages 480-489

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2016.210

Keywords

Extracellular matrix; neuroblastoma; ultra-high-risk neuroblastoma; reticulin fibres; blood vascularisation; glycosaminoglycans; collagen type I fibres; elastic fibres

Categories

Funding

  1. FIS [PI14/01008]
  2. RTICC [RD12/0036/0020, RD12/0036/0027]
  3. ISCIII & FEDER (European Regional Development Fund), Spain

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Background: Although survival for neuroblastoma patients has dramatically improved in recent years, a substantial number of children in the high-risk subgroup still die. Methods: We aimed to define a subgroup of ultra-high-risk patients from within the high-risk cohort. We used advanced morphometric approaches to quantify and characterise blood vessels, reticulin fibre networks, collagen type I bundles, elastic fibres and glycosaminoglycans in 102 high-risk neuroblastomas specimens. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to correlate the analysed elements with survival. Results: The organisation of blood vessels and reticulin fibres in neuroblastic tumours defined an ultra-high-risk patient subgroup with 5-year survival rate <15%. Specifically, tumours with irregularly shaped blood vessels, large sinusoid-like vessels, smaller and tortuous venules and arterioles and with large areas of reticulin fibres forming large, crosslinking, branching and haphazardly arranged networks were linked to the ultra-high-risk phenotype. Conclusions: We demonstrate that quantification of tumour stroma components by morphometric techniques has the potential to improve risk stratification of neuroblastoma patients.

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