- Upadhyaya, Santhosh;
- Robinson, Giles;
- Onar-Thomas, Arzu;
- Orr, Brent;
- Johann, Pascal;
- Wu, Gang;
- Billups, Catherine;
- Tatevossian, Ruth;
- Dhanda, Sandeep;
- Srinivasan, Ashok;
- Broniscer, Alberto;
- Qaddoumi, Ibrahim;
- Vinitsky, Anna;
- Armstrong, Gregory;
- Bendel, Anne;
- Hassall, Tim;
- Partap, Sonia;
- Fisher, Paul;
- Crawford, John;
- Chintagumpala, Murali;
- Bouffet, Eric;
- Gururangan, Sridharan;
- Mostafavi, Roya;
- Sanders, Robert;
- Klimo, Paul;
- Patay, Zoltan;
- Indelicato, Daniel;
- Nichols, Kim;
- Boop, Frederick;
- Merchant, Thomas;
- Kool, Marcel;
- Ellison, David;
- Gajjar, Amar
PURPOSE: Report relevance of molecular groups to clinicopathologic features, germline SMARCB1/SMARCA4 alterations (GLA), and survival of children with atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (ATRT) treated in two multi-institutional clinical trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seventy-four participants with newly diagnosed ATRT were treated in two trials: infants (SJYC07: age < 3 years; n = 52) and children (SJMB03: age 3-21 years; n = 22), using surgery, conventional chemotherapy (infants), or dose-dense chemotherapy with autologous stem cell rescue (children), and age- and risk-adapted radiotherapy [focal (infants) and craniospinal (CSI; children)]. Molecular groups ATRT-MYC (MYC), ATRT-SHH (SHH), and ATRT-TYR (TYR) were determined from tumor DNA methylation profiles. RESULTS: Twenty-four participants (32%) were alive at time of analysis at a median follow-up of 8.4 years (range, 3.1-14.1 years). Methylation profiling classified 64 ATRTs as TYR (n = 21), SHH (n = 30), and MYC (n = 13), SHH group being associated with metastatic disease. Among infants, TYR group had the best overall survival (OS; P = 0.02). However, outcomes did not differ by molecular groups among infants with nonmetastatic (M0) disease. Children with M0 disease and <1.5 cm2 residual tumor had a 5-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 72.7 ± 12.7% and OS of 81.8 ± 11%. Infants with M0 disease had a 5-year PFS of 39.1 ± 11.5% and OS of 51.8 ± 12%. Those with metastases fared poorly [5-year OS 25 ± 12.5% (children) and 0% (infants)]. SMARCB1 GLAs were not associated with PFS. CONCLUSIONS: Among infants, those with ATRT-TYR had the best OS. ATRT-SHH was associated with metastases and consequently with inferior outcomes. Children with nonmetastatic ATRT benefit from postoperative CSI and adjuvant chemotherapy.