This review advances a contemporary, mechanistically grounded framework linking genetic architecture, molecular pathogenesis, and targeted interventions to inform individualized management of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common inherited cardiac muscle disorder, yet contemporary genomic and mechanistic research still lacks a cohesive model explaining how diverse genetic architectures give rise to heterogeneous phenotypes. This review synthesizes advances across sarcomeric and non-sarcomeric mutations, including intermediate-effect variants, polygenic modifiers, and ancestry-dependent sources of variant misclassification to elucidate how these factors govern disease penetrance and clinical expression. It critically evaluates how genetic diversity intersects with key molecular pathways, including sarcomeric hypercontractility, calcium dysregulation, mitochondrial energy deficiency, and TGF-β and AKT/mTOR signaling, to drive hypertrophic and fibrotic remodeling. Emerging mechanism-based therapies, such as myosin inhibition, allele-specific silencing, CRISPR-based correction, and metabolic modulation, are examined with respect to their capacity to modify upstream molecular drivers rather than downstream hemodynamic consequences. Persistent challenges, including VUS classification, ancestry-biased databases, inequitable access to genetic testing, and unresolved safety concerns for gene-based therapies, are critically assessed as major barriers to precision-medicine integration. By linking genetic architecture, molecular pathogenesis, and targeted interventions, this review advances a contemporary, mechanistically grounded framework that informs both individualized management and future research directions. Future research should prioritize pathway-specific therapeutics, functional and mechanistic validation of emerging variants, deeper physiologic phenotyping to refine disease modeling, and accelerate translation throughout the continuum of HCM pathophysiology.
Marwaha et al. (Wed,) studied this question.