4.2 Article

Clinical delineation and natural history of the PIK3CA-related overgrowth spectrum

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
Volume 164, Issue 7, Pages 1713-1733

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.36552

Keywords

somatic mosaicism; PIK3CA gene; fibroadipose overgrowth; segmental overgrowth; macrodactyly; CLOVES syndrome

Funding

  1. National Human Genome Research Institute
  2. Wellcome Trust (Senior Research Fellowship in Clinical Science) [098498/Z/12/Z]
  3. Clinical Research Training Fellowship [097721/Z/11/Z]
  4. UK National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
  5. UK Medical Research Council Centre for Obesity and Related Metabolic Diseases
  6. Wellcome Trust [098498/Z/12/Z, 097721/Z/11/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  7. MRC [G0600717] Funding Source: UKRI
  8. Medical Research Council [G0600717, MC_UU_12012/5/B, G0600717B] Funding Source: researchfish

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Somatic mutations in the phosphatidylinositol/AKT/mTOR pathway cause segmental overgrowth disorders. Diagnostic descriptors associated with PIK3CA mutations include fibroadipose overgrowth (FAO), Hemihyperplasia multiple Lipomatosis (HHML), Congenital Lipomatous Overgrowth, Vascular malformations, Epidermal nevi, Scoliosis/skeletal and spinal (CLOVES) syndrome, macrodactyly, and the megalencephaly syndrome, Megalencephaly-Capillary malformation (MCAP) syndrome. We set out to refine the understanding of the clinical spectrum and natural history of these phenotypes, and now describe 35 patients with segmental overgrowth and somatic PIK3CA mutations. The phenotypic data show that these previously described disease entities have considerable overlap, and represent a spectrum. While this spectrum overlaps with Proteus syndrome (sporadic, mosaic, and progressive) it can be distinguished by the absence of cerebriform connective tissue nevi and a distinct natural history. Vascular malformations were found in 15/35 (43%) and epidermal nevi in 4/35 (11%) patients, lower than in Proteus syndrome. Unlike Proteus syndrome, 31/35 (89%) patients with PIK3CA mutations had congenital overgrowth, and in 35/35 patients this was asymmetric and disproportionate. Overgrowth was mild with little postnatal progression in most, while in others it was severe and progressive requiring multiple surgeries. Novel findings include: adipose dysregulation present in all patients, unilateral overgrowth that is predominantly left-sided, overgrowth that affects the lower extremities more than the upper extremities and progresses in a distal to proximal pattern, and in the most severely affected patients is associated with marked paucity of adipose tissue in unaffected areas. While the current data are consistent with some genotype-phenotype correlation, this cannot yet be confirmed. (c) 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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