Bilateral Nephroblastic Tumors and a Complex Renal Vascular Anomaly in a Patient With a Mosaic RASopathy: Novel Histopathologic Features and Molecular Insights

Mosaic RASopathies are an emerging group of disorders characterized by mosaic or post-zygotic activating mutations in genes of the RAS/MAPKinase signaling pathway. The phenotype is highly variable, ranging from limited or localized forms to cases with a syndromic presentation with extensive or multi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric and developmental pathology 2021-06, Vol.24 (3), p.235-240, Article 1093526620986502
Hauptverfasser: Slack, Jonathan C, Bründler, Marie-Anne, Chang, Caitlin A, Perrier, Renee, Lafay-Cousin, Lucie, Kurek, Kyle C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mosaic RASopathies are an emerging group of disorders characterized by mosaic or post-zygotic activating mutations in genes of the RAS/MAPKinase signaling pathway. The phenotype is highly variable, ranging from limited or localized forms to cases with a syndromic presentation with extensive or multiorgan involvement, and also overlaps with other mosaic disorders. While there are several reports of malignancies in patients with mosaic RASopathies, specifically rhabdomyosarcoma and transitional urothelial carcinoma, the lifetime risk and molecular mechanisms that lead to the development of malignancies remain unclear. We report a 22-month-old boy with a somatic RASopathy due to an underlying KRAS p.G12D mutation who presented with a large unilateral epidermal nevus, asymmetric lower limb overgrowth with lytic and sclerotic bone lesions, capillary malformation, bilateral nephrogenic rests and Wilms tumors, and a novel complex renal vascular anomaly that resembles Fibro-Adipose Vascular Anomaly (FAVA). This report further expands the phenotypic spectrum of somatic RASopathies, and discusses the potential phenotypic and pathogenetic overlap with PIK3CA-related overgrowth disorders, specifically CLOVES. The occurrence of a secondary cancer hotspot mutation (FBXW7 p.R479G) in the Wilms tumor, but not the associated nephrogenic rest, moreover suggests that additional driver mutations are involved in the development of Wilms tumor in somatic overgrowth disorders.
ISSN:1093-5266
1615-5742
DOI:10.1177/1093526620986502