Overgrowth syndrome and/or cerebral malformations due to abnormalities in MTOR pathway genes
MONDO:0100283A disease caused by mosaic gain-of-function (GoF) of several genes in the MTOR pathway (MTOR, PIK3CA, PIK3R2 and AKT3) are functionally the same despite significant phenotypic variability. These GoF variants result in overgrowth due to an over-activation of key genes in this pathway. The phenotypic variability is generally attributed to the mosaic fraction and affected tissue types. For example, macrocephaly is noted if the variant is identified in the brain, but non symmetric overgrowth of that limb is noted when the variant is only present in the affected limb. The pathologies of the affected tissue often reveal similar characteristics such as cellular overgrowth. However, this is not always the case especially with focal cortical dysplasia. At times the characteristics pathologies are not present in the tissue but sampling biases are an issue. FCD resections often involve a very small area and so a very small amount of tissue is available for pathology and it is not guaranteed that lesional tissue is sent. Therefore, having a single disease term which can encompass the phenotypic variability yet provide a unifying molecular diagnosis name makes sense given the common functional mechanism.
Also known as: overgrowth syndrome and/or cerebral malformations due to abnormalities in MTOR pathway genes
15 clinical trials for this condition and its sub-types.
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Glowing dye could help surgeons spot hidden epilepsy lesions
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis study tests whether a fluorescent dye called 5-ALA can help surgeons see and remove abnormal brain tissue in people with drug-resistant epilepsy caused by focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). FCD lesions are often hard to distinguish from healthy brain during surgery, making comp…
Phase: PHASE2 • Sponsor: Hospices Civils de Lyon • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 14:00 UTC
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New pill aims to tame seizures in rare brain disorders
Disease control Not yet recruitingThis early-stage trial tests an oral drug called SVG103 (Paxalisib) in 15 adults with rare brain conditions (FCD-II, TSC, or HME) that cause seizures. The main goal is to check safety and side effects, while also seeing if it reduces seizure frequency. Participants take the drug …
Phase: PHASE1, PHASE2 • Sponsor: Sovargen • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 08:05 UTC