Phenotypic and genetic spectrum of SCN 8A ‐related disorders, treatment options, and outcomes
Pathogenic variants in SCN 8A have originally been described in patients with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ( DEE ). However, recent studies have shown that SCN 8A variants can be associated with a broader phenotypic spectrum, including the following: (1) Patients with early onset, seve...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Epilepsia (Copenhagen) 2019-12, Vol.60 (S3) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Pathogenic variants in
SCN
8A
have originally been described in patients with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (
DEE
). However, recent studies have shown that
SCN
8A
variants can be associated with a broader phenotypic spectrum, including the following: (1) Patients with early onset, severe
DEE
, developing severe cognitive and motor regression, pyramidal/extrapyramidal signs, and cortical blindness. Severe
SCN
8A
‐
DEE
is characterized by intractable seizures beginning in the first months of life. The seizures are often prolonged focal hypomotor and occur in clusters, with prominent vegetative symptoms (apnea, cyanosis, mydriasis), evolving to clonic or bilateral tonic‐clonic manifestations. Spasm‐like episodes, cortical myoclonus, and recurrent episodes of status epilepticus are also common. Electroencephalograms (
EEG
s) show progressive background deterioration and multifocal abnormalities, predominant in the posterior regions. (2) Sporadic and familial patients with mild‐to‐moderate intellectual disability, discrete neurological signs, and treatable epilepsy.
EEG
is abnormal in half of the cases, showing multifocal or diffuse epileptiform abnormalities. (3) Familial cases with benign infantile seizures, sometimes associated with paroxysmal dyskinesia later in life, with no other neurological deficits, normal cognition, and usually normal interictal
EEG
. (4) Patients without epilepsy but with cognitive and/or behavioral disturbances, or with movement disorders. Extrapyramidal features, such as dyskinesia, ataxia, and choreoathetosis are common in all groups. Early death has been reported in about 5% of the patients, most often in the subgroup of severe
DEE
. Premature death occurs during early childhood and often for causes other than sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. All epilepsy subgroups exhibit better seizure control with sodium channel blockers, usually at supratherapeutic doses in the severe cases. In severe
SCN
8A
‐
DEE
, ketogenic diet often has a good effect, whereas levetiracetam has a negative effect, if any. The familial
SCN
8A
‐related epilepsies show an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance, whereas the vast majority of
SCN
8A
‐
DEE
s occur de novo. |
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ISSN: | 0013-9580 1528-1167 |
DOI: | 10.1111/epi.16319 |