Abstract
Pineoblastoma (PB) is a rare yet lethal pediatric brain cancer of the pineal gland, a small endocrine organ that secretes melatonin to regulate the circadian rhythm. For PB patients ≤5 years of age, the overall survival rate is approximately 15%; metastatic PB is incurable. Standard treatment, including surgical resection, radiation, and systemic chemotherapy, improves survival but compromises neurocognitive function. A better understanding of the disease and the generation of preclinical models may enable re-evaluation of previous clinical trials, development of precision therapeutic strategies and improve patient outcome. Over the past 5 years, PB has been recognized to include several major subtypes driven by (i) loss of microRNA processing factors DICER and DROSHA characterized by a relatively good prognosis; (ii) loss of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor RB1; and (iii) amplification or induction of the cMYC protooncogene, with the latter two subtypes exhibiting exceedingly poor prognosis. Recently, mouse models for the major PB subtypes (RB1-, DICER1- and DROSHA-) except MYC- have been established. This progress, including better understanding of the disease, cell of origin, tumor progression, role of autophagy, and targetable vulnerabilities, holds promise for novel therapeutic strategies to combat each subtype of this lethal childhood malignancy.