Expanded clinical phenotype spectrum correlates with variant function in SCN2A-related disorders

SCN2A-related disorders secondary to altered function in the voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.2 are rare with clinically heterogeneous expressions that include epilepsy, autism, and multiple severe to profound impairments and other conditions. To advance understanding of the clinical phenotypes and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain (London, England : 1878) England : 1878), 2024-08, Vol.147 (8), p.2761-2774
Hauptverfasser: Berg, Anne T, Thompson, Christopher H, Myers, Leah Schust, Anderson, Erica, Evans, Lindsey, Kaiser, Ariela J E, Paltell, Katherine, Nili, Amanda N, DeKeyser, Jean-Marc, Abramova, Tatiana V, Nesbitt, Gerry, Egan, Shawn, Vanoye, Carlos G, George, Jr, Alfred L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:SCN2A-related disorders secondary to altered function in the voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.2 are rare with clinically heterogeneous expressions that include epilepsy, autism, and multiple severe to profound impairments and other conditions. To advance understanding of the clinical phenotypes and their relation to channel function, 81 patients (36, 44% female, median age 5.4 years) with 69 unique SCN2A variants were systematically phenotyped and their NaV1.2 channel function systematically assessed. Participants were recruited through the FamileSCN2A Foundation. Primary phenotype (epilepsy of neonatal-onset, N=27; infant onset, N=18; and later onset N=24; and autism without seizures, (N=12) was strongly correlated with a non-seizure severity index (p=0.002), which was based on presence of severe impairments in gross motor, fine motor, communication abilities, gastrostomy tube dependence, and diagnosis of cortical visual impairment and scoliosis. Non-seizure severity was greatest in the neonatal-onset group and least in the autism group (p=0.002). Children with the lowest severity indices were still severely impaired, as reflected by an average Vineland adaptive behavior composite score of 49.5 (>3 SD below the test's norm-referenced mean). Epileptic spasms were significantly more common in infant onset (67%) than in neonatal (22%) or later-onset (29%) epilepsy (p=0.007). Primary phenotype also strongly correlated with variant function (p
ISSN:0006-8950
1460-2156
1460-2156
DOI:10.1093/brain/awae125