Further delineation and long-term evolution of electroclinical phenotype in Mowat Wilson Syndrome. A longitudinal study in 40 individuals

[Display omitted] •Epilepsy is hallmark of Mowat Wilson Syndrome occurring in all patients >5 years.•There is an age-dependent pattern, with electroclinical improvement in adolescence.•Focal seizures are the first and most prominent seizure type.•Focal seizures are often long-lasting and start wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Epilepsy & behavior 2021-11, Vol.124, p.108315-108315, Article 108315
Hauptverfasser: Ricci, Emilia, Fetta, Anna, Garavelli, Livia, Caraffi, Stefano, Ivanovski, Ivan, Bonanni, Paolo, Accorsi, Patrizia, Giordano, Lucio, Pantaleoni, Chiara, Romeo, Antonino, Arena, Alessia, Bonetti, Silvia, Boni, Antonella, Chiarello, Daniela, Di Pisa, Veronica, Epifanio, Roberta, Faravelli, Francesca, Finardi, Erica, Fiumara, Agata, Grioni, Daniele, Mammi, Isabella, Negrin, Susanna, Osanni, Elisa, Raviglione, Federico, Rivieri, Francesca, Rizzi, Romana, Savasta, Salvatore, Tarani, Luigi, Zanotta, Nicoletta, Dormi, Ada, Vignoli, Aglaia, Canevini, Mariapaola, Cordelli, Duccio M.
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Epilepsy is hallmark of Mowat Wilson Syndrome occurring in all patients >5 years.•There is an age-dependent pattern, with electroclinical improvement in adolescence.•Focal seizures are the first and most prominent seizure type.•Focal seizures are often long-lasting and start with subtle clinical signs.•Valproic acid is the most used and effective antiepileptic drug in MWS, followed by levetiracetam. Epilepsy is a main feature of Mowat Wilson Syndrome (MWS), a congenital malformation syndrome caused by ZEB2 variants. The aim of this study was to investigate the long-term evolution of the electroclinical phenotype of MWS in a large population. Forty-individuals with a genetically confirmed diagnosis were enrolled. Three age groups were identified (t1 = 0–4; t2 = 5–12; t3 = >13 years); clinical data and EEG records were collected, analyzed, and compared for age group. Video-EEG recorded seizures were reviewed. Thirty-six of 40 individuals had epilepsy, of whom 35/35 aged >5 years. Almost all (35/36) presented focal seizures at onset (mean age at onset 3.4 ± 2.3 SD) that persisted, reduced in frequency, in 7/22 individuals after the age of 13. Absences occurred in 22/36 (mean age at onset 7.2 ± 0.9 SD); no one had absences before 6 and over 16 years old. Paroxysmal interictal abnormalities in sleep also followed an age-dependent evolution with a significant increase in frequency at school age (p = 0.002) and a reduction during adolescence (p = 0.008). Electrical Status Epilepticus during Sleep occurred in 14/36 (13/14 aged 5–13 years old at onset). Seven focal seizure ictal video-EEGs were collected: all were long-lasting and more visible clinical signs were often preceded by prolonged electrical and/or subtle (erratic head and eye orientation) seizures. Valproic acid was confirmed as the most widely used and effective drug, followed by levetiracetam. Epilepsy is a major sign of MWS with a characteristic, age-dependent, electroclinical pattern. Improvement with adolescence/adulthood is usually observed. Our data strengthen the hypothesis of a GABAergic transmission imbalance underlying ZEB2-related epilepsy.
ISSN:1525-5050
1525-5069
DOI:10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.108315