von Stülpnagel C, Ensslen M, Møller RS, Pal DK, Masnada S,
Veggiotti P, Piazza E, Dreesmann M, Hartlieb T, Herberhold T, Hughes E, Koch M,
Kutzer C, Hoertnagel K, Nitanda J, Pohl M, Rostásy K, Haack TB, Stöhr K, Kluger
G, Borggraefe I. Epilepsy in patients with GRIN2A alterations: Genetics,
neurodevelopment, epileptic phenotype and response to anticonvulsive drugs.
Eur J Paediatr Neurol. 2017 Jan 14. pii: S1090-3798(17)30004-1. doi: 10.1016/j.ejpn.2017.01.001.
[Epub
ahead of print]
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To delineate the genetic, neurodevelopmental and epileptic
spectrum associated with GRIN2A alterations with emphasis on epilepsy
treatment.
METHODS:
Retrospective study of 19 patients (7 females; age: 1-38
years; mean 10.1 years) with epilepsy and GRIN2A alteration. Genetic variants
were classified according to the guidelines and recommendations of the American
College of Medical Genetics (ACMG). Clinical findings including epilepsy
classification, treatment, EEG findings, early childhood development and
neurodevelopmental outcome were collected with an electronic questionnaire.
RESULTS:
7 out of 19 patients fulfilled the ACMG-criteria of carrying
"pathogenic" or "likely pathogenic variants", in twelve
patients the alterations were classified as variants of unknown significance.
The spectrum of pathogenic/likely pathogenic mutations was as follows: nonsense
n = 3, missense n = 2, duplications/deletions n = 1 and splice site n = 1.
First seizures occurred at a mean age of 2.4 years with heterogeneous seizure
types. Patients were treated with a mean of 5.6 AED. 4/5 patients with VPA had
an improved seizure frequency (n = 3 with a truncation: n = 1 missense). 3/5
patients with STM reported an improvement of seizures (n = 2 truncation, n = 1
splicing). 3/5 CLB patients showed an improvement (n = 2: truncation; n = 1
splicing). Steroids were reported to have a positive effect on seizure
frequency in 3/5 patients (n = 1 each truncation, splicing or deletion).
CONCLUSIONS:
Our data indicate that children with epilepsy due to
pathogenic GRIN2A mutations present with different clinical phenotypes and a
spectrum of seizure types in the context of a pharmacoresistant epilepsy
providing information for clinicians treating children with this form of
genetically determined epileptic syndrome.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/neurology/medical-news-article/2017/01/25/grin2a-epilepsy-epileptic-encephalopathy-specialized-therapy/7011736/?category=latest&page_id=1
See: http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2016/06/grin1-phenotypic-spectrum.html
http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2015/11/grin1-mutation.html
See: http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2016/06/grin1-phenotypic-spectrum.html
http://childnervoussystem.blogspot.com/2015/11/grin1-mutation.html
No comments:
Post a Comment