Phenotypic and genetic spectrum of epilepsy with myoclonic atonic seizures
- Creators
- Tang S.
- Addis L.
- Smith A.
- Topp S. D.
- Pendziwiat M.
- Mei D.
- Parker A.
- Agrawal S.
- Hughes E.
- Lascelles K.
- Williams R. E.
- Fallon P.
- Robinson R.
- Cross H. J.
- Hedderly T.
- Eltze C.
- Kerr T.
- Desurkar A.
- Hussain N.
- Kinali M.
- Bagnasco I.
- Vassallo G.
- Whitehouse W.
- Goyal S.
- Absoud M.
- Moller R. S.
- Helbig I.
- Weber Y. G.
- Marini C.
- Striano P
- Guerrini R.
- Simpson M. A.
- Pal D. K.
- Others:
- Tang, S.
- Addis, L.
- Smith, A.
- Topp, S. D.
- Pendziwiat, M.
- Mei, D.
- Parker, A.
- Agrawal, S.
- Hughes, E.
- Lascelles, K.
- Williams, R. E.
- Fallon, P.
- Robinson, R.
- Cross, H. J.
- Hedderly, T.
- Eltze, C.
- Kerr, T.
- Desurkar, A.
- Hussain, N.
- Kinali, M.
- Bagnasco, I.
- Vassallo, G.
- Whitehouse, W.
- Goyal, S.
- Absoud, M.
- Moller, R. S.
- Helbig, I.
- Weber, Y. G.
- Marini, C.
- Striano, P
- Guerrini, R.
- Simpson, M. A.
- Pal, D. K.
Description
Objective: We aimed to describe the extent of neurodevelopmental impairments and identify the genetic etiologies in a large cohort of patients with epilepsy with myoclonic atonic seizures (MAE). Methods: We deeply phenotyped MAE patients for epilepsy features, intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder using standardized neuropsychological instruments. We performed exome analysis (whole exome sequencing) filtered on epilepsy and neuropsychiatric gene sets to identify genetic etiologies. Results: We analyzed 101 patients with MAE (70% male). The median age of seizure onset was 34 months (range = 6-72 months). The main seizure types were myoclonic atonic or atonic in 100%, generalized tonic-clonic in 72%, myoclonic in 69%, absence in 60%, and tonic seizures in 19% of patients. We observed intellectual disability in 62% of patients, with extremely low adaptive behavioral scores in 69%. In addition, 24% exhibited symptoms of autism and 37% exhibited attention-deficit/hyperactivity symptoms. We discovered pathogenic variants in 12 (14%) of 85 patients, including five previously published patients. These were pathogenic genetic variants in SYNGAP1 (n = 3), KIAA2022 (n = 2), and SLC6A1 (n = 2), as well as KCNA2, SCN2A, STX1B, KCNB1, and MECP2 (n = 1 each). We also identified three new candidate genes, ASH1L, CHD4, and SMARCA2 in one patient each. Significance: MAE is associated with significant neurodevelopmental impairment. MAE is genetically heterogeneous, and we identified a pathogenic genetic etiology in 14% of this cohort by exome analysis. These findings suggest that MAE is a manifestation of several etiologies rather than a discrete syndromic entity.
Additional details
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1025803
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1025803
- Origin repository
- UNIGE