Tuberous sclerosis in Adult
Synopsis

The phenotypic presentation of TSC is extremely variable with a range of clinical presentations, presenting over a range of ages and with a range of severity. The diagnosis is challenging due to the wide variation in severity and age-related penetrance of individual manifestations. In some cases, TSC is not diagnosed until adolescence or adulthood.
Clinical manifestations in childhood include the formation of various benign tumors involving the brain, skin, kidneys, heart, eyes, lung, and liver. TSC patients also have an increased risk of malignancy.
All patients will have at least one type of skin finding including hypomelanotic macules, adenoma sebaceum (facial angiofibromas), shagreen patches, and periungual fibromas.
A majority of TSC patients will have epilepsy, and more than half will have developmental delays collectively termed TSC-associated neuropsychiatric disorders (TAND). Brain lesions including glioneuronal hamartomas and periventricular giant cell astrocytomas are commonly identified in patients with TAND.
Kidney involvement is also very common. The prevalence of renal lesions increases with age and includes angiomyolipomas (the most common lesion isolated) as well as lymphangiomas, benign cysts, and renal cell carcinoma. Symptoms are often related to size, specifically with angiomyolipomas, which can cause pain, bleeding, and impaired renal function as they enlarge.
Cardiac involvement can occur but is not necessary in TSC. The most common lesion is a cardiac rhabdomyoma, and most children with rhabdomyomas have TSC.
Pulmonary involvement is also less common. It generally occurs in adults with TSC and is indistinguishable from lymphangioleiomyomatosis.
Codes
Q85.1 – Tuberous sclerosis
SNOMEDCT:
7199000 – Tuberous sclerosis
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Last Updated:01/25/2022