Clinical and molecular characterization of patients with YWHAG‐related epilepsy

Objective YWHAG variant alleles have been associated with a rare disease trait whose clinical synopsis includes an early onset epileptic encephalopathy with predominantly myoclonic seizures, developmental delay/intellectual disability, and facial dysmorphisms. Through description of a large cohort,...

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Hauptverfasser: Cetica, V, Pisano, T, Lesca, G, Marafi, D, Licchetta, L, Riccardi, F, Mei, D, Chung, H.B, Bayat, A, Balasubramanian, M, Lowenstein, D.H, Endzinienė, M, Alotaibi, M, Villeneuve, N, Jacobs, J, Isidor, B, Solazzi, R, den Hollander, N.S, Marjanovic, D, Rougeot‐Jung, C, Jung, J, Lesieur‐Sebellin, M, Accogli, A, Salpietro, V, Saadi, N.W, Panagiotakaki, E, Foiadelli, T, Redon, S, Tsai, M, Bisulli, F, Hammer, T.B, Lupski, J.R, Parrini, E, Guerrini, R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective YWHAG variant alleles have been associated with a rare disease trait whose clinical synopsis includes an early onset epileptic encephalopathy with predominantly myoclonic seizures, developmental delay/intellectual disability, and facial dysmorphisms. Through description of a large cohort, which doubles the number of reported patients, we further delineate the spectrum of YWHAG-related epilepsy. Methods We included in this study 24 patients, 21 new and three previously described, with pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in YWHAG. We extended the analysis of clinical, electroencephalographic, brain magnetic resonance imaging, and molecular genetic information to 24 previously published patients. Results The phenotypic spectrum of YWHAG-related disorders ranges from mild developmental delay to developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Epilepsy onset is in the first 2 years of life. Seizure freedom can be achieved in half of the patients (13/24, 54%). Intellectual disability (23/24, 96%), behavioral disorders (18/24, 75%), neurological signs (13/24, 54%), and dysmorphisms (6/24, 25%) are common. A genotype–phenotype correlation emerged, as DEE is more represented in patients with missense variants located in the ligand-binding domain than in those with truncating or missense variants in other domains (90% vs. 19%, p 
DOI:10.1111/epi.17939