# Case Report: 3 cases of abdominal lesions with lower limb lymphedema—rare mutations in complex lymphatic anomalies

**Authors:** Yujia Zhang, Yaxin Jiang, Tong Qiu, Congxia Yang, Min Yang, Siyuan Chen, Yi Ji

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1635659 · 2025-09-29

## TL;DR

This case report describes three rare cases of complex lymphatic anomalies with abdominal lesions and leg swelling, using ctDNA to find new genetic links.

## Contribution

The study identifies rare mutations in CLAs using ctDNA, linking novel genotypes to specific phenotypes in a noninvasive way.

## Key findings

- Circulating tumor DNA analysis detected high-frequency somatic mutations in two cases.
- Mutant genes identified were previously rare in vascular diseases.
- ctDNA shows diagnostic utility for atypical complex lymphatic anomalies.

## Abstract

Complex lymphatic anomalies (CLAs) are rare vascular anomalies characterized by abnormal proliferation of lymphatic and blood vessels, often resulting in multisystem involvement with heterogeneous clinical manifestations. We present 3 patients with CLAs exhibiting overlapping features of lower limb lymphedema and intra-abdominal vascular malformations, a phenotypic combination infrequently described in literature. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) analysis in 2 cases detected somatic mutations at significantly higher variant allele frequencies compared to population databases, and mutant genes that were previously rare in vascular diseases were reported. These noninvasive molecular findings demonstrate diagnostic utility in identifying novel genotype-phenotype associations, providing insights into disease mechanisms and informing therapeutic strategies for atypical CLAs presentations. Our observations highlight ctDNA as a promising tool for refining diagnosis and guiding personalized management in rare vascular anomalies.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** abdominal lesions (MESH:D000008), CLAs (MESH:D044148), vascular diseases (MESH:D014652), lower limb lymphedema (MESH:D008209), tumor (MESH:D009369), intra-abdominal vascular malformations (MESH:D054079), vascular anomalies (MESH:D020785)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12515625/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12515625