Abstract

Simple SummaryCongenital lateralized or segmental overgrowth (LO) disorders are conditions characterized by excessive tissue growth of a body region often associated with a predisposition to cancer. LOs are caused by mosaic DNA anomalies, that is, they are present only in a part of the cells making up the body. LOs have an extremely heterogeneous clinical presentation: they widely overlap in presentation, are difficult to frame from a clinical point of view and have a diagnostic complexity representing a challenge for the clinician who approaches them. Here we review the key features of the various LOs, expose their molecular causes, and detail the implications for each of them, such as the need for specific cancer screening or the possibility of treatment. The latter represents a recent scientific achievement in medicine, allowed by the development of precision drugs finely tuning cellular pathways involved in growth and tumorigenesis deranged in LO.Congenital disorders of lateralized or segmental overgrowth (LO) are heterogeneous conditions with increased tissue growth in a body region. LO can affect every region, be localized or extensive, involve one or several embryonic tissues, showing variable severity, from mild forms with minor body asymmetry to severe ones with progressive tissue growth and related relevant complications. Recently, next-generation sequencing approaches have increased the knowledge on the molecular defects in LO, allowing classifying them based on the deranged cellular signaling pathway. LO is caused by either genetic or epigenetic somatic anomalies affecting cell proliferation. Most LOs are classifiable in the Beckwith–Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp), PI3KCA/AKT-related overgrowth spectrum (PROS/AROS), mosaic RASopathies, PTEN Hamartoma Tumor Syndrome, mosaic activating variants in angiogenesis pathways, and isolated LO (ILO). These disorders overlap over common phenotypes, making their appraisal and distinction challenging. The latter is crucial, as specific management strategies are key: some LO is associated with increased cancer risk making imperative tumor screening since childhood. Interestingly, some LO shares molecular mechanisms with cancer: recent advances in tumor biological pathway druggability and growth downregulation offer new avenues for the treatment of the most severe and complicated LO.

Highlights

  • Lateralized overgrowth (LO), or segmental overgrowth, is defined as an increase in tissue growth of various origins in any region of the body [1]

  • The objective of this review is to provide an overview of lateralized or segmental overgrowth (LO) molecular basis, diagnostic-care protocols, cancer screening and new drug treatment strategies currently under study

  • (UPD(11)pat), leading to both expression anomalies seen in IC2 loss of methylation (IC2-LoM) and IC1-GoM; (e) CDKN1C loss-of-function mutaThe latter are dominant and lead to Beckwith–Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp) phenotype only when inherited from the mother

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Summary

Introduction

Lateralized overgrowth (LO), or segmental overgrowth, is defined as an increase in tissue growth of various origins (skeletal, muscular, fibrous, vascular, adipose, or any association of these) in any region of the body [1]. LO and segmental overgrowth are used synonymously and currently replace the previous nomenclature The latter largely referred to body/hemi hyperplasia/hypertrophy, terms that implicated the histologic definition of cell proliferation or increased cell size, respectively. Objective methods, such as tape measurements or imaging studies of both soft and skeletal tissue by computed tomography, magnetic resonance, 3D technologies or DEXA scanning can be useful to better define, characterize and quantify the degree of LO and in the differential diagnosis of such overgrowth disorders [2]. These measurements are not standardized as yet [3]. The objective of this review is to provide an overview of LO molecular basis, diagnostic-care protocols, cancer screening and new drug treatment strategies currently under study

Overview
Lateralized
Cancer
Molecular Diagnosis
Pathophysiology and Druggability
PROS and Cancer
Proteus Syndrome and AKT1-Related Overgrowth Spectrum
Mosaic RASopathies
Lateralized Overgrowth Syndromes with Vascular Anomalies
Molecular Bases
Cancer Risk and Surveillance
Findings
Conclusions
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