Invited Review: DNA methylation-based classification of paediatric brain tumours.
Eilís PerezDavid CapperPublished in: Neuropathology and applied neurobiology (2020)
DNA methylation-based machine learning algorithms represent powerful diagnostic tools that are currently emerging for several fields of tumour classification. For various reasons, paediatric brain tumours have been the main driving forces behind this rapid development and brain tumour classification tools are likely further advanced than in any other field of cancer diagnostics. In this review, we will discuss the main characteristics that were important for this rapid advance, namely the high clinical need for improvement of paediatric brain tumour diagnostics, the robustness of methylated DNA and the consequential possibility to generate high-quality molecular data from archival formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded pathology specimens, the implementation of a single array platform by most laboratories allowing data exchange and data pooling to an unprecedented extent, as well as the high suitability of the data format for machine learning. We will further discuss the four most central output qualities of DNA methylation profiling in a diagnostic setting (tumour classification, tumour sub-classification, copy number analysis and guidance for additional molecular testing) individually for the most frequent types of paediatric brain tumours. Lastly, we will discuss DNA methylation profiling as a tool for the detection of new paediatric brain tumour classes and will give an overview of the rapidly growing family of new tumours identified with the aid of this technique.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- dna methylation
- big data
- deep learning
- white matter
- resting state
- copy number
- genome wide
- intensive care unit
- emergency department
- artificial intelligence
- gene expression
- electronic health record
- cerebral ischemia
- mitochondrial dna
- primary care
- blood brain barrier
- high resolution
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- papillary thyroid
- brain injury
- circulating tumor