706 results on '"Pasquale Striano"'
Search Results
2. The impact of anti-seizure medications on electroencephalogram (EEG) results
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Gianluca Dini, Giovanni Battista Dell’isola, Elisabetta Mencaroni, Pietro Ferrara, Giuseppe Di Cara, Pasquale Striano, and Alberto Verrotti
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General Neuroscience ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
3. Somatic Double Inactivation of NF1 Associated with NF1-Related Pectus Excavatum Deformity
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Cristina Chelleri, Marcello Scala, Patrizia De Marco, Vittorio Guerriero, Marzia Ognibene, Francesca Madia, Sara Guerrisi, Marco Di Duca, Michele Torre, Serena Tamburro, Paolo Scudieri, Gianluca Piccolo, Girolamo Mattioli, Francesca Buffelli, Paolo Uva, Diego Vozzi, Ezio Fulcheri, Pasquale Striano, Maria Cristina Diana, and Federico Zara
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Article Subject ,Genetics ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a neurocutaneous genetic disorder with a broad spectrum of associated signs and symptoms, including skeletal anomalies. The association of NF1 with anterior chest wall deformities has been recently reported, especially the pectus excavatum (PE). Over the years, several authors have suggested loss of heterozygosity (LOH) as the possible pathogenic mechanism underlying the development of the typical NF1 skeletal features. Here, we report a NF1 patient with severe chest deformity and harboring the germline heterozygous pathogenic NF1 variant NM_001042492.3: c.4271delC p.(Ala1424Glufs ∗ 4). Through next-generation sequencing (NGS), we investigated the affected cartilage from the PE deformity and identified the additional frameshift variant NM_001042492.3: c.2953delC p.(Gln985Lysfs ∗ 7), occurring as a somatic NF1 second hit mutation. Exome sequencing confirmed the absence of additional variants of potential pathogenic relevance. Western blot analysis showed the absence of wild-type NF1 protein in the cartilage of the patient, consistent with a somatic double inactivation (SDI) of NF1. Taken together, our findings support the role of SDI in NF1-related PE, widening the spectrum of the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in NF1-related skeletal features.
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- 2023
4. Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale to Evaluate the Functional Impairment of Patients With Subcortical Band Heterotopia: A Multicentric Cross-sectional Study
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Irene Toldo, Francesco Brunello, Paola Cavasin, Margherita Nosadini, Stefano Sartori, Anna Chiara Frigo, Roberto Mai, Veronica Pelliccia, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Pasquale Striano, Marisavina Severino, Federico Zara, Romana Rizzi, Susanna Casellato, Gabriella Di Rosa, Mario Mastrangelo, Alberto Spalice, Mauro Budetta, Luca De Palma, Renzo Guerrini, Dario Pruna, Duccio Maria Cordelli, Vito Sofia, Amanda Papa, Valentina Chiesa, Francesca Ragona, Pasquale Parisi, Alfredo D'Aniello, Pierangelo Veggiotti, Filippo Dainese, Lucio Giordano, Laura Licchetta, Paolo Tinuper, Giuseppe D'Orsi, Matteo Cassina, and Renzo Manara
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Adults ,Children ,EGOS-ped ,Functional disability ,Subcortical band heterotopia ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
5. Ketamine as advanced second‐line treatment in benzodiazepine‐refractory convulsive status epilepticus in children
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Silvia Buratti, Emanuele Giacheri, Antonella Palmieri, Jessica Tibaldi, Giacomo Brisca, Antonella Riva, Pasquale Striano, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Lino Nobili, and Andrea Moscatelli
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
6. Epilepsy Course and Developmental Trajectories in STXBP1 -DEE
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Ganna Balagura, Julie Xian, Antonella Riva, Francesca Marchese, Bruria Ben Zeev, Loreto Rios, Deepa Sirsi, Patrizia Accorsi, Elisabetta Amadori, Guja Astrea, Simona Baldassari, Francesca Beccaria, Antonella Boni, Mauro Budetta, Gaetano Cantalupo, Giuseppe Capovilla, Elisabetta Cesaroni, Valentina Chiesa, Antonietta Coppola, Robertino Dilena, Raffaella Faggioli, Annarita Ferrari, Elena Fiorini, Francesca Madia, Elena Gennaro, Thea Giacomini, Lucio Giordano, Michele Iacomino, Simona Lattanzi, Carla Marini, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Massimo Mastrangelo, Tullio Messana, Carlo Minetti, Lino Nobili, Amanda Papa, Antonia Parmeggiani, Tiziana Pisano, Angelo Russo, Vincenzo Salpietro, Salvatore Savasta, Marcello Scala, Andrea Accogli, Barbara Scelsa, Paolo Scudieri, Alberto Spalice, Nicola Specchio, Marina Trivisano, Michal Tzadok, Massimiliano Valeriani, Maria Stella Vari, Alberto Verrotti, Federico Vigevano, Aglaia Vignoli, Ruud Toonen, Federico Zara, Ingo Helbig, Pasquale Striano, Ganna Balagura, Julie Xian, Antonella Riva, Francesca Marchese, Bruria Ben Zeev, Loreto Rios, Deepa Sirsi, Patrizia Accorsi, Elisabetta Amadori, Guja Astrea, Simona Baldassari, Francesca Beccaria, Antonella Boni, Mauro Budetta, Gaetano Cantalupo, Giuseppe Capovilla, Elisabetta Cesaroni, Valentina Chiesa, Antonietta Coppola, Robertino Dilena, Raffaella Faggioli, Annarita Ferrari, Elena Fiorini, Francesca Madia, Elena Gennaro, Thea Giacomini, Lucio Giordano, Michele Iacomino, Simona Lattanzi, Carla Marini, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Massimo Mastrangelo, Tullio Messana, Carlo Minetti, Lino Nobili, Amanda Papa, Antonia Parmeggiani, Tiziana Pisano, Angelo Russo, Vincenzo Salpietro, Salvatore Savasta, Marcello Scala, Andrea Accogli, Barbara Scelsa, Paolo Scudieri, Alberto Spalice, Nicola Specchio, Marina Trivisano, Michal Tzadok, Massimiliano Valeriani, Maria Stella Vari, Alberto Verrotti, Federico Vigevano, Aglaia Vignoli, Ruud Toonen, Federico Zara, Ingo Helbig, and Pasquale Striano, Functional Genomics, and Amsterdam Neuroscience - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms
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DEE = developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,neurodevelopmental trajectories ,ASM = antiseizure medication ,epilepsy ,FCD = focal cortical dysplasia ,developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, epilepsy, neurodevelopmental trajectories ,Neurology (clinical) ,developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ,Genetics (clinical) ,ID = intellectual disability - Abstract
Background and ObjectivesClinical manifestations in STXBP1 developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) vary in severity and outcome, and the genotypic spectrum is diverse. We aim to trace the neurodevelopmental trajectories in individuals with STXBP1-DEE and dissect the relationship between neurodevelopment and epilepsy.MethodsRetrospective standardized clinical data were collected through international collaboration. A composite neurodevelopmental score system compared the developmental trajectories in STXBP1-DEE.ResultsForty-eight patients with de novo STXBP1 variants and a history of epilepsy were included (age range at the time of the study: 10 months to 35 years, mean 8.5 years). At the time of inclusion, 65% of individuals (31/48) had active epilepsy, whereas 35% (17/48) were seizure free, and 76% of those (13/17) achieved remission within the first year of life. Twenty-two individuals (46%) showed signs of developmental impairment and/or neurologic abnormalities before epilepsy onset. Age at seizure onset correlated with severity of developmental outcome and the developmental milestones achieved, with a later seizure onset associated with better developmental outcome. In contrast, age at seizure remission and epilepsy duration did not affect neurodevelopmental outcomes. Overall, we did not observe a clear genotype-phenotype correlation, but monozygotic twins with de novo STXBP1 variant showed similar phenotype and parallel disease course.DiscussionThe disease course in STXBP1-DEE presents with 2 main trajectories, with either early seizure remission or drug-resistant epilepsy, and a range of neurodevelopmental outcomes from mild to profound intellectual disability. Age at seizure onset is the only epilepsy-related feature associated with neurodevelopment outcome. These findings can inform future dedicated natural history studies and trial design.
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- 2022
7. Immediate and progressive neurological damage after electrical injury: A pediatric case report
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Alfonso Rubino, Pia Bernardo, Carmela Russo, Celeste Tucci, Luigia D'Amato, Veronica Piccolo, Vincenzo Andreone, Pasquale Striano, Geremia Zito Marinosci, and Antonio Varone
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Developmental Neuroscience ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
8. Effects of three-months folate supplementation on early vascular abnormalities in hyperhomocysteinemic patients with epilepsy
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Mariarosaria De Luca, Antonio Valvano, Pasquale Striano, Giorgio Bosso, Daniela Pirone, Assunta Trinchillo, Leonilda Bilo, and Ugo Oliviero
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Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinase-1 ,Epilepsy ,Folic Acid ,Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 ,Neurology ,Dietary Supplements ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine ,Homocysteine - Abstract
Epilepsy has been associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events. Anti-seizure medication (ASM) may contribute to vascular risk by several mechanisms, including increased homocysteine levels. This study aims to assess the global vascular burden in hyperhomocysteinemic people with epilepsy (PWE) on long-term ASM before and after folic acid supplementation and in subgroups of PWE treated with single enzyme-inducing or single non-enzyme inducing ASM.One hundred and seventy-four hyperhomocysteinemic (HHcy) PWE who met the inclusion criteria were enrolled. Carotid Doppler ultrasonography, FMD and ultrasound assessment of the brachial artery properties at the baseline and after 90 days of folic acid supplementation were performed. The vascular biomarkers MMP-9 and TIMP-1 were also detected.After folic acid supplementation, in HHcy patients homocysteine levels reduced from 26.8 ± 10.5 to 20.2 ± 5.3 μmol/L, carotid Intima-Media-Thickness reduced from 0.83+0.06 mm to 0.79±0.05 mm, and FMD, distensibility coefficient and β-stiffness improved (p 0.05). Moreover, MMP-9 and TIMP-1 reduced after supplementation (p 0.05). PWE treated with a single enzyme-inducing ASM showed an impairment of vascular parameters compared to patients treated with non-enzyme inducing ASM.The results highlight the importance of assessing homocysteine levels and estimating the cardiovascular risk of PWE, preferring non-enzyme inducing ASM in high cardiovascular-risk patients. An adequate correction of homocysteine levels with folate supplementation should be considered to improve the cardiovascular profile.
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- 2022
9. Brivaracetam add-on treatment in pediatric patients with severe drug-resistant epilepsy: Italian real-world evidence
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Angelo Russo, Jacopo Pruccoli, Carlo Alberto Cesaroni, Laura Maria Beatrice Belotti, Corrado Zenesini, Paolo Bonanni, Antonella Boni, Elisabetta Cesaroni, Giangennaro Coppola, Duccio Maria Cordelli, Alberto Danieli, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Francesca Marchese, Sara Matricardi, Tullio Messana, Giovanna Martina Nocera, Francesca Felicia Operto, Giuditta Pellino, Federica Reina, Francesca Vanadia, Alberto Verrotti, and Pasquale Striano
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Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,Epilepsy ,Adolescent ,General Medicine ,Pyrrolidinones ,Treatment Outcome ,Neurology ,Seizures ,Humans ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Neurology (clinical) ,Child - Abstract
To report the efficacy and tolerability of brivaracetam (BRV) in add-on therapy in pediatric patients with severe drug-resistant epilepsy. Prognostic factors of clinical outcome were also analyzed.This Italian multicenter retrospective observational study was conducted on 45 pediatric patients with severe drug-resistant epilepsy, treated with BRV for at least 1 month and with a follow-up6 months. Demographic, clinical, and treatment variables were assessed at T0 (baseline, BRV introduction) and T1 (6 months after BRV introduction). The response was defined as ≥50% seizure frequency reduction; responders and non-responders were then compared to assess potential prognostic factors.Forty-five patients (M = 28, mean age 12.4+/-4.4 years) were enrolled (focal epilepsy=14; generalized epilepsy=2; epileptic encephalopathy=29). At T1, 19/45 patients (42.2%) were responders (≥50% seizure frequency reduction), with 4 patients (8.9%) achieving a ≥ 75% seizure reduction and 2 patients (4.4%) becoming seizure free. Epilepsy onset at12 months of age (p = 0.001), disease duration ≤6 years (p = 0.036), and lower seizure frequency at baseline (p = 0.008) were the prognostic factors significantly associated with a better prognosis. No significant difference emerged for demographics, epilepsy types/etiology, intellectual disability, or therapy variables. At T1, 21 patients (46.6%) discontinued BRV, mainly due to lack of efficacy (13 subjects; 28.9%) and adverse events in 8 patients (17.8%).Brivaracetam was an effective and tolerated treatment in pediatric patients with severe drug-resistant epilepsy, especially when the seizure onset was at12 months of age, the epilepsy duration ≤6 years, and the seizure frequency before BRV treatment was low. Further and controlled studies are needed.
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- 2022
10. An Italian consensus on the management of Lennox-Gastaut syndrome
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Antonella Riva, Antonietta Coppola, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Maurizio Elia, Edoardo Ferlazzo, Giuseppe Gobbi, Carla Marini, Stefano Meletti, Antonino Romeo, Katia Santoro, Alberto Verrotti, Giuseppe Capovilla, Pasquale Striano, Umberto Aguglia, Irene Bagnasco, Emanuele Bartolini, Domenica Battaglia, Francesca Beccaria, Vincenzo Belcastro, Pia Bernardo, Paolo Bonanni, Clementina Boniver, Alice Bonuccelli, Eleonora Briatore, Francesco Brigo, Elisabetta Cesaroni, Roberta Coa, Cinzia Costa, Alfredo D'Aniello, Valentina De Giorgis, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, Anna Rita Ferrari, Francesca Marchese, Sara Matricardi, Tullio Messana, Alessandra Morano, Francesca Felicia Operto, Alessandro Orsini, Lucio Parmeggiani, Cinzia Peruzzi, Dario Pruna, Monica Puligheddu, Patrizia Pulitano, Francesca Ragona, Andrea Romigi, Anna Rosati, Eleonora Rosati, Angelo Russo, Stefano Sartori, Carlotta Spagnoli, Maria Spanò, Antonio Trabacca, Serena Troisi, Maurizio Viri, and Claudio Zucca
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Consensus ,Lennox Gastaut Syndrome ,Lennox-Gastaut syndrome ,Valproic Acid ,General Medicine ,Lamotrigine ,Antiseizure medications ,Neurology ,Topiramate ,Pediatric epilepsy ,Fenfluramine ,Clobazam ,Quality of Life ,Cannabidiol ,Humans ,Anticonvulsants ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Although international guidelines exist, the clinical heterogeneity of Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) and the increasing availability of new and repurposed drugs (e.g., fenfluramine and cannabidiol) requires a practical guide to patient management in the clinical context. We report the results of a consensus survey among 42 Italian experts in the diagnosis and treatment of LGS.The consensus procedure followed a modified Delphi approach. Statements were formulated, based on the most recent published evidence and the clinicians' personal experience, then discussed, and agreed upon by the experts through a two-round voting procedure. Approval of a statement was reached with an average score ≥7.Thirteen statements dealing with three main topics (i.e., clinical diagnosis and prognosis, impact on the Quality of Life (QoL), and treatment strategies) were generated. Six statements achieved a level of agreement sufficient for approval on the first voting round. Following the discussion and a few consequent amendments, most of the statements increased their level of agreement and all 13 were approved.Overall, the statements draw a slightly more benign picture of this rare and severe disease, highlighting the possibility of remission - albeit modest -, an apparent trend towards lower mortality, and the availability of several effective drugs, to which greater accessibility would be hoped for. Valproate remains a major therapeutic option in LGS patients although lamotrigine, rufinamide, topiramate, cannabidiol, and clobazam are popular therapeutic options in Italy, allowing for a tailor-made antiseizure therapy.
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- 2022
11. Genotype-phenotype correlations in SCN8A-related disorders reveal prognostic and therapeutic implications
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Roseline Caume, M Scott Perry, Massimo Mastrangelo, Margarete Koch-Hogrebe, Pasquale Striano, Karen Müller-Schlüter, Petra Laššuthová, Monisa D. Wagner, Ingo Helbig, Stephan Lauxmann, Emmanuel Scalais, Marie-Cécile Nassogne, Silvia Masnada, Henrike O. Heyne, Konrad Platzer, Frederic Bilan, Chloe A Stutterd, Sonja Walsh, Katrine M Johannesen, Damien Lederer, Ngoc Minh Le, Christina Fenger, Daniel Tibussek, Lukas Sonnenberg, Andrea Berger, Yuanyuan Liu, Mikhail Abramov, Karen E. Wain, Sergey Korostelev, P Y Billie Au, Elena L. Dadali, An-Sofie Schoonjans, Cornelia Betzler, Artem Borovikov, Johanna Krüger, Maert Rannap, Sebastian Lebon, Nils A Koch, Nancy Eisenhauer, Judith Kroell-Seger, Julian Schubert, Marije Meuwissen, Caroline Lund, Mark Fitzgerald, Federico Zara, Siddharth Srivastava, Claudia M Bonardi, Pia Zacher, Haim Bassan, Arve Vøllo, Katherine B. Howell, Francesca Darra, Guido Rubboli, Stephen W. Scherer, Bénédicte Gérard, Stefano Sartori, Annapurna Poduri, Helene Verhelst, Katalin Sterbova, Mathilde Nizon, Marketa Vlckova, Christina E. Hoei-Hansen, Renzo Guerrini, Ilya V. Kanivets, Juliann M. Savatt, Johannes Rebstock, Jakob Christensen, Cecilia Altuzarra, Dennis Lal, Judith S. Verhoeven, Agathe Roubertie, Constanze Heine, Dagmar Wieczorek, Ingo Borggraefe, Aster V. E. Harder, Anne Destrée, Wen-Hann Tan, Tobias Brünger, Shoji Ichikawa, Laura Canafoglia, Mahmoud Koko, Sergey Kutsev, Sabine Grønborg, Patrizia Accorsi, Heather E. Olson, Bert van der Zwaag, Cathrine E Gjerulfsen, Patrick May, A. A. Sharkov, M. Mahdi Motazacker, Manuela Pendziwiat, Richard J. Leventer, Anna Jansen, Lucio Giordano, Holger Lerche, Carla Marini, Karl Martin Klein, Eva H. Brilstra, Ahmed Eltokhi, Ethan M. Goldberg, Walid Fazeli, Rikke S. Møller, Dorota Hoffman-Zacharska, Michael Alber, Susanne Ruf, Jennifer L. Howe, Phillis Lakeman, Josua Kegele, Katherine L. Helbig, Marga Buzatu, Alice W Ho, Jan Benda, Ilona Krey, Marion Gérard, Sara Matricardi, Thomas U. Mayer, Philippe Gelisse, Jong M. Rho, Johannes R. Lemke, Pierangelo Veggiotti, Tobias Loddenkemper, Gaetan Lesca, Ulrike B. S. Hedrich, Silvana Franceschetti, Elena Gardella, Irina Mishina, María Vaccarezza, Timo Roser, Public Health Sciences, Mental Health and Wellbeing research group, Neurogenetics, Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation, Pediatrics, Human Genetics, ANS - Complex Trait Genetics, ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, Human genetics, and Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
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medicine.medical_specialty ,SCN8A ,Gastroenterology ,Epilepsy ,Sodium channel blocker ,Neurodevelopmental disorder ,Seizures ,Intellectual Disability ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Missense mutation ,genetics ,Generalized epilepsy ,Genetic Association Studies ,Benign familial infantile epilepsy ,Generalized ,business.industry ,Infant ,personalized medicine ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Settore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantile ,NAV1.6 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel ,Mutation ,epilepsy ,Original Article ,Epilepsy, Generalized ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Age of onset ,business ,Epileptic Syndromes ,Sodium Channel Blockers - Abstract
We report detailed functional analyses and genotype-phenotype correlations in 392 individuals carrying disease-causing variants in SCN8A, encoding the voltage-gated Na+ channel Nav1.6, with the aim of describing clinical phenotypes related to functional effects. Six different clinical subgroups were identified: Group 1, benign familial infantile epilepsy (n = 15, normal cognition, treatable seizures); Group 2, intermediate epilepsy (n = 33, mild intellectual disability, partially pharmaco-responsive); Group 3, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (n = 177, severe intellectual disability, majority pharmaco-resistant); Group 4, generalized epilepsy (n = 20, mild to moderate intellectual disability, frequently with absence seizures); Group 5, unclassifiable epilepsy (n = 127); and Group 6, neurodevelopmental disorder without epilepsy (n = 20, mild to moderate intellectual disability). Those in Groups 1–3 presented with focal or multifocal seizures (median age of onset: 4 months) and focal epileptiform discharges, whereas the onset of seizures in patients with generalized epilepsy was later (median: 42 months) with generalized epileptiform discharges. We performed functional studies expressing missense variants in ND7/23 neuroblastoma cells and primary neuronal cultures using recombinant tetrodotoxin-insensitive human Nav1.6 channels and whole-cell patch-clamping. Two variants causing developmental and epileptic encephalopathy showed a strong gain-of-function (hyperpolarizing shift of steady-state activation, strongly increased neuronal firing rate) and one variant causing benign familial infantile epilepsy or intermediate epilepsy showed a mild gain-of-function (defective fast inactivation, less increased firing). In contrast, all three variants causing generalized epilepsy induced a loss-of-function (reduced current amplitudes, depolarizing shift of steady-state activation, reduced neuronal firing). Functional effects were known for 170 individuals. All 136 individuals carrying a functionally tested gain-of-function variant had either focal (n = 97, Groups 1–3) or unclassifiable (n = 39) epilepsy, whereas 34 individuals with a loss-of-function variant had either generalized (n = 14), no (n = 11) or unclassifiable (n = 6) epilepsy; only three had developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Computational modelling in the gain-of-function group revealed a significant correlation between the severity of the electrophysiological and clinical phenotypes. Gain-of-function variant carriers responded significantly better to sodium channel blockers than to other anti-seizure medications, and the same applied for all individuals in Groups 1–3. In conclusion, our data reveal clear genotype-phenotype correlations between age at seizure onset, type of epilepsy and gain- or loss-of-function effects of SCN8A variants. Generalized epilepsy with absence seizures is the main epilepsy phenotype of loss-of-function variant carriers and the extent of the electrophysiological dysfunction of the gain-of-function variants is a main determinant of the severity of the clinical phenotype in focal epilepsies. Our pharmacological data indicate that sodium channel blockers present a treatment option in SCN8A-related focal epilepsy with onset in the first year of life.
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- 2022
12. Electrocardiogram Changes in the Postictal Phase of Epileptic Seizure: Results from a Prospective Study
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Bella, Lorenzo Gigli, Simone Sala, Alberto Preda, Kenji Okubo, Giovanni Peretto, Antonio Frontera, Marisa Varrenti, Matteo Baroni, Marco Carbonaro, Sara Vargiu, Chiara Di Resta, Pasquale Striano, Patrizio Mazzone, and Paolo Della
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ECG ,epilepsy ,Brugada Syndrome ,cardiac channelopathies ,sudden cardiac death ,sudden unexpected death in epilepsy - Abstract
Background: The brain and heart are strictly linked and the electrical physiologies of these organs share common pathways and genes. Epilepsy patients have a higher prevalence of electrocardiogram (ECG) abnormalities compared to healthy people. Furthermore, the relationship between epilepsy, genetic arrhythmic diseases and sudden death is well known. The association between epilepsy and myocardial channelopathies, although already proposed, has not yet been fully demonstrated. The aim of this prospective observational study is to assess the role of the ECG after a seizure. Materials and Methods: From September 2018 to August 2019, all patients admitted to the emergency department of San Raffaele Hospital with a seizure were enrolled in the study; for each patient, neurological, cardiological and ECG data were collected. The ECG was performed at the time of the admission (post-ictal ECG) and 48 h later (basal ECG) and analyzed by two blinded expert cardiologists looking for abnormalities known to indicate channelopathies or arrhythmic cardiomyopathies. In all patients with abnormal post-ictal ECG, next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis was performed. Results: One hundred and seventeen patients were enrolled (females: 45, median age: 48 ± 12 years). There were 52 abnormal post-ictal ECGs and 28 abnormal basal ECGs. All patients with an abnormal basal ECG also had an abnormal post-ictal ECG. In abnormal post-ictal ECG, a Brugada ECG pattern (BEP) was found in eight patients (of which two had BEP type I) and confirmed in two basal ECGs (of which zero had BEP type I). An abnormal QTc interval was identified in 20 patients (17%), an early repolarization pattern was found in 4 patients (3%) and right precordial abnormalities were found in 5 patients (4%). Any kind modification of post-ictal ECG was significantly more pronounced in comparison with an ECG recorded far from the seizure (p = 0.003). A 10:1 higher prevalence of a BEP of any type (particularly in post-ictal ECG, p = 0.04) was found in our population compared to general population. In three patients with post-ictal ECG alterations diagnostic for myocardial channelopathy (BrS and ERP), not confirmed at basal ECG, a pathogenic gene variant was identified (KCNJ8, PKP2 and TRMP4). Conclusion: The 12-lead ECG after an epileptic seizure may show disease-related alterations otherwise concealed in a population at a higher incidence of sudden death and channelopathies. Post-ictal BEP incidence was higher in cases of nocturnal seizure.
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- 2023
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13. Familial adult myoclonus epilepsy:Neuroimaging and neuropathological findings
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Anne‐Fleur van Rootselaar, Sirio Cocozza, Eleonora Aronica, Pasquale Striano, and Pathology
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Familial adult myoclonus epilepsy (FAME) is characterized by cortical myoclonus and often epileptic seizures, but the pathophysiology of this condition remains uncertain. Here, we review the neuroimaging and neuropathological findings in FAME. Imaging findings, including functional magnetic resonance imaging, are in line with a cortical origin of involuntary tremulous movements (cortical myoclonic tremor) and indicate a complex pattern of cerebellar functional connectivity. Scarce neuropathological reports, mainly from a single family, provide evidence of morphological changes in the Purkinje cells. Cerebellar changes seem to be part of the syndrome, in at least some FAME pedigrees. Cortical hyperexcitability in FAME, resulting in the cardinal clinical symptoms, might be the result of decreased cortical inhibition via the cerebellothalamocortical loop. The pathological findings might share some similarities with other pentanucleotide repeat disorders. The relation with genetic findings in FAME needs to be elucidated.
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- 2023
14. Pediatric SARS-CoV-2–Related Diplopia and Mesencephalic Abnormalities
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Sara Signa, Noemi Brolatti, Chiara Trincianti, Domenico Tortora, Carolina Saffioti, Eddi Di Marco, Maura Acquila, Elisabetta Amadori, Chiara Fiorillo, Erica Ricci, Pasquale Striano, Elio Castagnola, and Maria Stella Vari
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Cases ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
ObjectiveThis case report describes a patient with mesencephalic MRI signal abnormality and diplopia, possibly associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection.MethodsWe describe a boy with binocular diplopia and nystagmus. The pattern of serology positivity and negative direct research of SARS-CoV-2 RNA in our patient allowed us to consider novel coronavirus as the trigger of possible immune-mediated phenomena against the central nervous system.ResultsDuring hospitalization, blood tests revealed a recent SARS-CoV-2 infection. MRI revealed hyperintensity of the mesencephalic tegmentum and periaqueductal region, consistent with an inflammatory lesion of the midbrain tegmentum. Viral and bacterial molecular screening on cerebrospinal fluid and isoelectrofocusing analysis, anti–myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein, anti–aquaporine-4, and anti–N-methyl-d-aspartate antibodies were negative. The patient was treated with steroids and immunoglobulin therapy with complete remission of neurologic symptoms.DiscussionThis report expands the spectrum of pediatric COVID-19–associated neurologic symptoms and highlights a possible isolated neurologic COVID-19–related symptom.
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- 2022
15. Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) variants and epilepsy: A multicenter case series
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Nadia Ronzano, Marcello Scala, Emanuela Abiusi, Ilaria Contaldo, Chiara Leoni, Maria Stella Vari, Tiziana Pisano, Domenica Battaglia, Maurizio Genuardi, Maurizio Elia, Pasquale Striano, and Dario Pruna
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Adolescent ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Electroencephalography ,General Medicine ,Settore MED/03 - GENETICA MEDICA ,Neurology ,Seizures ,Tensins ,Humans ,epilepsy ,Epilepsies, Partial ,Neurology (clinical) ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
EEG anomalies and epilepsy are a not so rare clinical manifestation in patients with Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) variants. The main aim of this study is to analyze the characteristics of EEG traces, neuroimaging findings and epilepsy to better define the neurological aspects in a set of patients with PTEN variants collected in four Italian Centres. As a secondary aim, we describe the neurodevelopmental profile and the psychiatric comorbidities of this cohort.Patients with PTEN variants, identified by Sanger sequencing or target resequencing, were enrolled. For each subjects, clinical data were retrospectively extracted from medical charts, with a focus on epilepsy and neuroimaging data.54 patients with PTEN variants were enrolled, with a mean age of 18.8 years. 72.2% have at least one psychiatric diagnosis, being Autism Spectrum Disorder and Intellectual Disability the most frequent diagnosis (29 and 25 cases, respectively). 22 subjects show an abnormal EEG and 8 received a diagnosis of epilepsy, mainly focal epilepsy (7/8), with a mean age at seizure onset of 3.8 years. 3/8 subjects have a drug resistant epilepsy, independently from the underlying neuroimaging pattern. The finding of a Focal cortical dysplasia is significantly associated with both an abnormal EEG (p = 0.02) and the occurrence of seizures (p = 0.002).EEG should be taken into consideration in the first-line diagnostic flowchart of subjects with PTEN variants. The onset of a focal epilepsy, independently from its response to antiepileptic drugs, highly recommends to carry out a neuroimaging exam.
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- 2022
16. Event‐based modeling in temporal lobe epilepsy demonstrates progressive atrophy from cross‐sectional data
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Seymour M, Lopez, Leon M, Aksman, Neil P, Oxtoby, Sjoerd B, Vos, Jun, Rao, Erik, Kaestner, Saud, Alhusaini, Marina, Alvim, Benjamin, Bender, Andrea, Bernasconi, Neda, Bernasconi, Boris, Bernhardt, Leonardo, Bonilha, Lorenzo, Caciagli, Benoit, Caldairou, Maria Eugenia, Caligiuri, Angels, Calvet, Fernando, Cendes, Luis, Concha, Estefania, Conde-Blanco, Esmaeil, Davoodi-Bojd, Christophe, de Bézenac, Norman, Delanty, Patricia M, Desmond, Orrin, Devinsky, Martin, Domin, John S, Duncan, Niels K, Focke, Sonya, Foley, Francesco, Fortunato, Marian, Galovic, Antonio, Gambardella, Ezequiel, Gleichgerrcht, Renzo, Guerrini, Khalid, Hamandi, Victoria, Ives-Deliperi, Graeme D, Jackson, Neda, Jahanshad, Simon S, Keller, Peter, Kochunov, Raviteja, Kotikalapudi, Barbara A K, Kreilkamp, Angelo, Labate, Sara, Larivière, Matteo, Lenge, Elaine, Lui, Charles, Malpas, Pascal, Martin, Mario, Mascalchi, Sarah E, Medland, Stefano, Meletti, Marcia E, Morita-Sherman, Thomas W, Owen, Mark, Richardson, Antonella, Riva, Theodor, Rüber, Ben, Sinclair, Hamid, Soltanian-Zadeh, Dan J, Stein, Pasquale, Striano, Peter N, Taylor, Sophia I, Thomopoulos, Paul M, Thompson, Manuela, Tondelli, Anna Elisabetta, Vaudano, Lucy, Vivash, Yujiang, Wang, Bernd, Weber, Christopher D, Whelan, Roland, Wiest, Gavin P, Winston, Clarissa Lin, Yasuda, Carrie R, McDonald, Daniel C, Alexander, Sanjay M, Sisodiya, Andre, Altmann, and Rhys H, Thomas
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Epilepsy ,Sclerosis ,3,979 ,disease progression ,duration of illness ,event-based model ,patient staging [Key Points ,MTLE ,Word Count] ,3 [Word Count] ,610 Medicine & health ,Key Points ,Hippocampus ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Neurology ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) ,Atrophy ,patient staging ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Objective: Recent work has shown that people with common epilepsies have characteristic patterns of cortical thinning, and that these changes may be progressive over time. Leveraging a large multicenter cross‐sectional cohort, we investigated whether regional morphometric changes occur in a sequential manner, and whether these changes in people with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy and hippocampal sclerosis (MTLE‐HS) correlate with clinical features. Methods: We extracted regional measures of cortical thickness, surface area, and subcortical brain volumes from T1‐weighted (T1W) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans collected by the ENIGMA‐Epilepsy consortium, comprising 804 people with MTLE‐HS and 1625 healthy controls from 25 centers. Features with a moderate case–control effect size (Cohen d ≥ .5) were used to train an event‐based model (EBM), which estimates a sequence of disease‐specific biomarker changes from cross‐sectional data and assigns a biomarker‐based fine‐grained disease stage to individual patients. We tested for associations between EBM disease stage and duration of epilepsy, age at onset, and antiseizure medicine (ASM) resistance. Results: In MTLE‐HS, decrease in ipsilateral hippocampal volume along with increased asymmetry in hippocampal volume was followed by reduced thickness in neocortical regions, reduction in ipsilateral thalamus volume, and finally, increase in ipsilateral lateral ventricle volume. EBM stage was correlated with duration of illness (Spearman ρ = .293, p = 7.03 × 10−16), age at onset (ρ = −.18, p = 9.82 × 10−7), and ASM resistance (area under the curve = .59, p = .043, Mann–Whitney U test). However, associations were driven by cases assigned to EBM Stage 0, which represents MTLE‐HS with mild or nondetectable abnormality on T1W MRI. Significance: From cross‐sectional MRI, we reconstructed a disease progression model that highlights a sequence of MRI changes that aligns with previous longitudinal studies. This model could be used to stage MTLE‐HS subjects in other cohorts and help establish connections between imaging‐based progression staging and clinical features.
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- 2022
17. De novo truncating NOVA2 variants affect alternative splicing and lead to heterogeneous neurodevelopmental phenotypes
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Marcello Scala, Nathalie Drouot, Suzanna C. MacLennan, Marja W. Wessels, Magdalena Krygier, Lisa Pavinato, Aida Telegrafi, Stella A. de Man, Marjon van Slegtenhorst, Michele Iacomino, Francesca Madia, Paolo Scudieri, Paolo Uva, Thea Giacomini, Giulia Nobile, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Ganna Balagura, Giovanni Battista Galloni, Alberto Verrotti, Muhammad Umair, Amjad Khan, Jan Liebelt, Miriam Schmidts, Thorsten Langer, Alfredo Brusco, Beata S. Lipska‐Ziętkiewicz, Jasper J. Saris, Nicolas Charlet‐Berguerand, Federico Zara, Pasquale Striano, Amélie Piton, and Clinical Genetics
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NOVA2 ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,neurodevelopmental disorder ,alternative splicing ,myoclonic seizures ,psychomotor regression ,truncating variants ,Alternative Splicing ,HeLa Cells ,Humans ,Muscle Hypotonia ,Neuro-Oncological Ventral Antigen ,Phenotype ,Intellectual Disability ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Genetics ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Alternative splicing (AS) is crucial for cell-type-specific gene transcription and plays a critical role in neuronal differentiation and synaptic plasticity. De novo frameshift variants in NOVA2, encoding a neuron-specific key splicing factor, have been recently associated with a new neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) with hypotonia, neurological features, and brain abnormalities. We investigated eight unrelated individuals by exome sequencing (ES) and identified seven novel pathogenic NOVA2 variants, including two with a novel localization at the KH1 and KH3 domains. In addition to a severe NDD phenotype, novel clinical features included psychomotor regression, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), dyspraxia, and urogenital and endocrinological manifestations. To test the effect of the variants on splicing regulation, we transfected HeLa cells with wildtype and mutant NOVA2 complementary DNA (cDNA). The novel variants NM_002516.4:c.754_756delCTGinsTT p.(Leu252Phefs*144) and c.1329dup p.(Lys444Glnfs*82) all negatively affected AS events. The distal p.(Lys444Glnfs*82) variant, causing a partial removal of the KH3 domain, had a milder functional effect leading to an intermediate phenotype. Our findings expand the molecular and phenotypic spectrum of NOVA2-related NDD, supporting the pathogenic role of AS disruption by truncating variants and suggesting that this is a heterogeneous condition with variable clinical course.
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- 2022
18. A real‐life pilot study of the clinical application of pharmacogenomics testing on saliva in epilepsy
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Antonella Riva, Roberta Roberti, Gianluca D'Onofrio, Maria Stella Vari, Elisabetta Amadori, Valentina De Giorgis, Caterina Cerminara, Nicola Specchio, Nicola Pietrafusa, Mario Tombini, Giovanni Assenza, Silvia Cappanera, Carla Marini, Paolo Rasmini, Pierangelo Veggiotti, Federico Zara, Emilio Russo, and Pasquale Striano
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
19. Surface deformation retrieval of the February 2023 South-East Turkeyand Northern Syria Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.5 seismic events through Sentinel-1and SAOCOM-1 co-seismic SAR image analysis
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Francesco Casu, Fernando Monterroso, Yenni Lorena Belen Roa, Pasquale Striano, Simone Atzori, Manuela Bonano, Claudio De Luca, Marianna Franzese, Michele Manunta, Giovanni Onorato, Muhammad Yasir, Ivana Zinno, and Riccardo Lanari
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On 6 February 2023 two Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.5 seismic events struck the South-East Turkey and Northern Syria regions, close to the cities of Gaziantep and Ekinözü, causing more than 50 thousands of fatalities and above 120 thousands of injured, with incalculable, widespread damage to the surrounding villages. Such earthquakes are related to the main geodynamic regime controlled by the triple junction between the Anatolian, Arabian and African Plates, and by the tectonic context associated with a shallow strike-slip faulting, including the East Anatolian Fault zone and the Dead Sea Transform. Immediately after the occurrence of these earthquakes, we started investigating the surface deformation field induced by the considered seismic events by applying the Differential SAR Interferometry (DInSAR) and the Pixel Offset (PO) techniques, within the framework of EPOS (European Plate Observing System), which is the European research infrastructure for the study of the solid Earth.To this aim, we exploited several co-seismic SAR data pairs that have been collected by different satellite constellations. First of all, we exploited C-band (5.6 cm of wavelength) SAR data acquired by the Sentinel-1A sensor of the European Copernicus program from both ascending (Track 14) and descending (Track 94 and 21) orbits. Moreover, we benefited from the availability of a number of L-band (23 cm of wavelength) SAR images acquired by the twin satellites of the Argentine SAOCOM-1 constellation, programmed in collaboration with the Italian and Argentine Space Agencies.The main focus of this work regards the joint exploitation of the Sentinel-1 and SAOCOM-1 SAR products to retrieve the 3D co-seismic deformation field. Further analysis is envisaged in order to model the co-seismic sources.This work is supported by: the 2022-2024 IREA-CNR and Italian Civil Protection Department agreement, and by the H2020 EPOS-SP (GA 871121) and Geo-INQUIRE (GA 101058518) projects. The authors also acknowledge ASI for providing the SAOCOM data under the ASI-CONAE SAOCOM License to Use Agreement. Sentinel-1 data were provided through the European Copernicus program.
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- 2023
20. On the exploitation of L-band DInSAR products retrieved through the SAOCOM-1 constellation for the investigation of natural and anthropogenic hazards
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Claudio De Luca, Yenni Lorena Belen Roa, Manuela Bonano, Francesco Casu, Marianna Franzese, Michele Manunta, Yasir Muhammad, Giovanni Onorato, Pasquale Striano, Ivana Zinno, and Riccardo Lanari
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Differential Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (DInSAR) is a well-known technique that allows the investigation of surface displacements affecting large areas on the Earth, in both natural and anthropogenic hazard scenarios, with limited costs and with a centimeter to millimiter accuracy. In the last decades the effectiveness of the satellite DInSAR technology for ground deformation analyses, and its crucial role in emergency scenarios, have been largely demonstrated, thus pushing the space agencies to develop new space-borne SAR systems. In particular, important investments on the development of L-band SAR systems are ongoing, with the forthcoming missions of ESA (ROSE-L), JAXA (PALSAR-3) and NASA-ISRO (NISAR), as well as the already operating SAOCOM-1 and PALSAR-2 systems clearly showing the relevance of these sensors, particularly for what attains their DInSAR applications. Indeed, it is worth to remark that the L-band DInSAR interferograms are effective in maintaining coherence for a long period over rather vegetated areas and in various cases of snow/ice covered zones, thus allowing to overcome the typical limitations of higher frequency systems, operating at C- and/or X-band, which, in the above scenarios, typically guarantee sufficient coherence only for a few weeks.In this work, we present the first results achieved by processing stripmap L-band SAR images acquired by the Argentinian SAOCOM-1 constellation. In particular, we show some algorithmic developments made for an efficient DInSAR exploitation of stripmap SAOCOM-1 images. These improvements can play a significant role in different scenarios as for creating a national scale L-band ground motion service and for civil protection purposes, thanks to the potential capability to provide, in several portions of Earth, systematic space-borne L-band products with a revisit time, typically, of 24 days that can be reduced down to 8 days. Finally, we present the surface displacement maps and time-series retrieved through the Parallel Small BAseline Subset (P-SBAS) processing chain, properly adapted to process the SAOCOM-1 images, over some selected areas of interest, which involve both volcanic hazard contexts (Campi Flegrei caldera and Etna and Stromboli volcano in Italy), and fast-/slow-moving hydrogeological phenomena (Zeri, Tuscany region and Garessio, Piemonte region, in Italy).The activities of this work were carried out within the project referred to as DInSAR-3M, funded by the Italian Space Agency (ASI), which is aimed at generating, through advanced DInSAR methodologies, surface deformation time series and mean velocity maps, spatially and temporally dense, for the multi-scale analysis of natural and anthropogenic phenomena.
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- 2023
21. Genotype–phenotype correlation in contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CNTNAP-2) developmental disorder
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Gianluca D’Onofrio, Andrea Accogli, Mariasavina Severino, Haluk Caliskan, Tomislav Kokotović, Antonela Blazekovic, Kristina Gotovac Jercic, Silvana Markovic, Tamara Zigman, Krnjak Goran, Nina Barišić, Vlasta Duranovic, Ana Ban, Fran Borovecki, Danijela Petković Ramadža, Ivo Barić, Walid Fazeli, Peter Herkenrath, Carla Marini, Roberta Vittorini, Vykuntaraju Gowda, Arjan Bouman, Clarissa Rocca, Issam Azmi Alkhawaja, Bibi Nazia Murtaza, Malik Mujaddad Ur Rehman, Chadi Al Alam, Gisele Nader, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Thea Giacomini, Siddharth Srivastava, Javeria Raza Alvi, Hoda Tomoum, Sara Matricardi, Michele Iacomino, Antonella Riva, Marcello Scala, Francesca Madia, Angela Pistorio, Vincenzo Salpietro, Carlo Minetti, Jean-Baptiste Rivière, Myriam Srour, Stephanie Efthymiou, Reza Maroofian, Henry Houlden, Sonja Catherine Vernes, Federico Zara, Pasquale Striano, Vanja Nagy, Clinical Genetics, University of St Andrews. School of Biology, University of St Andrews. Institute of Behavioural and Neural Sciences, and University of St Andrews. St Andrews Bioinformatics Unit
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MCC ,NDAS ,Genetics ,QH426 Genetics ,QH426 ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CNTNAP2) gene encodes for CASPR2, a presynaptic type 1 transmembrane protein, involved in cell–cell adhesion and synaptic interactions. Biallelic CNTNAP2 loss has been associated with “Pitt-Hopkins-like syndrome-1” (MIM#610042), while the pathogenic role of heterozygous variants remains controversial. We report 22 novel patients harboring mono- (n = 2) and bi-allelic (n = 20) CNTNAP2 variants and carried out a literature review to characterize the genotype–phenotype correlation. Patients (M:F 14:8) were aged between 3 and 19 years and affected by global developmental delay (GDD) (n = 21), moderate to profound intellectual disability (n = 17) and epilepsy (n = 21). Seizures mainly started in the first two years of life (median 22.5 months). Antiseizure medications were successful in controlling the seizures in about two-thirds of the patients. Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and/or other neuropsychiatric comorbidities were present in nine patients (40.9%). Nonspecific midline brain anomalies were noted in most patients while focal signal abnormalities in the temporal lobes were noted in three subjects. Genotype–phenotype correlation was performed by also including 50 previously published patients (15 mono- and 35 bi-allelic variants). Overall, GDD (p p p = 0.012), ASD (p = 0.009), language impairment (p = 0.020) and severe cognitive impairment (p = 0.031) were significantly associated with the presence of biallelic versus monoallelic variants. We have defined the main features associated with biallelic CNTNAP2 variants, as severe cognitive impairment, epilepsy and behavioral abnormalities. We propose CASPR2-deficiency neurodevelopmental disorder as an exclusively recessive disease while the contribution of heterozygous variants is less likely to follow an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern.
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- 2023
22. Essential headaches in developmental age: What is changed before, during and after the lockdown for COVID-19 pandemic. Clinical study
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Alice Bonuccelli, Greta Depietri, Tommaso Baldaccini, Irene Ricciutelli, Diego Peroni, Alberto Spalice, Gabriele Massimetti, Riccardo Morganti, Alessandro Orsini, and Pasquale Striano
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
IntroductionEssential headache is one of the main causes of pain in children, and has an important impact on their quality of life. In children with essential headaches play an important role in both triggers like stress, excessive use of video terminals, or physical fatigue but also comorbidities like anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbances. CoViD-19 Pandemic was very stressful, especially for children, and amplified all headache triggers and comorbidities.Study objectiveIn this work, we studied the aspects concerning the headache,lifestyle, habits, and mental health of children before, during, and after the lockdown and the differences between some categories (selected by age, gender, and headache status before the lockdown).MethodsThis study was conducted on 90 patients with primary headaches followed at the AOUP Neuropediatrics Clinic from January 2018 to March 2022. Participants answered a questionnaire of 21 questions. For every question, the answer was divided into three periods: before, during, or after the lockdown. All dates have been converted and inserted into a database and we used SPSS technology for statistical analysis.ResultsIn our study, 51,1% were females and 48,9% were males and there was a prevalence of adolescents (56,7%) compared to children from 5 to 11 years (43,3%). Regarding the headache onset, 77,7% of patients started to suffer from headaches before 10 years, moreover, 68,9% had familiarity with the headache. Using Cohen's K- Concordance Test, we performed a Concordance Analysis, studying the questions in the three periods above mentioned: considering headache characteristics there is poor concordance about the trend of headache; modest concordance (K: 0,2–0,4) about the frequency and the type (migraine or tension headache); moderate concordance (K: 0,41–0,61) about the acute use of analgesic. Analyzing lifestyle the lockdown had a significant impact on sports (practiced much less) and on the use of video terminals (used much more).ConclusionThe pandemic and lockdown aren't events that led to strong and unidirectional responses in patients, there is great variability in the answers about headache, lifestyle, and psychology, and each patient had individualized reactions. However, these considerations are not applied to physical activity and the use of video terminals, because both have been inevitably modified by the pandemic situations and so were not affected by subjective influence.
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- 2023
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23. Long‐term effectiveness of add‐on perampanel in patients with Lennox–Gastaut syndrome: A multicenter retrospective study
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Sara Matricardi, Elisabetta Cesaroni, Paolo Bonanni, Nicoletta Foschi, Alfredo D′Aniello, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, Pasquale Striano, Silvia Cappanera, Sabrina Siliquini, Elena Freri, Francesca Ragona, Tiziana Granata, Francesco Deleo, Flavio Villani, Angelo Russo, Tullio Messana, Laura Siri, Irene Bagnasco, Aglaia Vignoli, Francesca Felicia Operto, Alessandro Orsini, Alice Bonuccelli, Amanda Papa, Cinzia Peruzzi, Claudio Liguori, Alberto Verrotti, Francesco Chiarelli, Carla Marini, and Simona Lattanzi
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
24. Familial adult myoclonus epilepsy: Clinical findings, disease course, and comorbidities
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Beatriz G. Giraldez, José M. Serratosa, Salvatore Striano, Akio Ikeda, Pasquale Striano, and Antonietta Coppola
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
25. Expanding the phenotype associated with biallelic SLC20A2 variants
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Gianluca D’Onofrio, Marcello Scala, Mariasavina Severino, Roberta Roberti, Ferruccio Romano, Patrizia De Marco, Michele Iacomino, Simona Baldassari, Paolo Uva, Marco Pavanello, Stefano Gustincich, Pasquale Striano, Federico Zara, and Valeria Capra
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Genetics ,Genetics (clinical) - Published
- 2023
26. GLUT1-DS Italian registry: past, present, and future: a useful tool for rare disorders
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Costanza Varesio, Valentina De Giorgis, Pierangelo Veggiotti, Nardo Nardocci, Tiziana Granata, Francesca Ragona, Ludovica Pasca, Martina Maria Mensi, Renato Borgatti, Sara Olivotto, Roberto Previtali, Antonella Riva, Maria Margherita Mancardi, Pasquale Striano, Mara Cavallin, Renzo Guerrini, Francesca Felicia Operto, Alice Pizzolato, Ruggero Di Maulo, Fabiola Martino, Andrea Lodi, and Carla Marini
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Pharmacology (medical) ,General Medicine ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Background GLUT1 deficiency syndrome is a rare, genetically determined neurological disorder for which Ketogenic Dietary Treatment represents the gold standard and lifelong treatment. Patient registries are powerful tools providing insights and real-world data on rare diseases. Objective To describe the implementation of a national web-based registry for GLUT1-DS. Methods This is a retrospective and prospective, multicenter, observational registry developed in collaboration with the Italian GLUT1-DS association and based on an innovative, flexible and configurable cloud computing technology platform, structured according to the most rigorous requirements for the management of patient’s sensitive data. The Glut1 Registry collects baseline and follow-up data on the patient’s demographics, history, symptoms, genotype, clinical, and instrumental evaluations and therapies. Results Five Centers in Italy joined the registry, and two more Centers are currently joining. In the first two years of running, data from 67 patients (40 females and 27 males) have been collected. Age at symptom onset was within the first year of life in most (40, 60%) patients. The diagnosis was formulated in infancy in almost half of the cases (34, 51%). Symptoms at onset were mainly paroxysmal (mostly epileptic seizure and paroxysmal ocular movement disorder) or mixed paroxysmal and fixed symptoms (mostly psychomotor delay). Most patients (53, 79%) are currently under Ketogenic dietary treatments. Conclusions We describe the principles behind the design, development, and deployment of the web-based nationwide GLUT1-DS registry. It represents a stepping stone towards a more comprehensive understanding of the disease from onset to adulthood. It also represents a virtuous model from a technical, legal, and organizational point of view, thus representing a possible paradigmatic example for other rare disease registry implementation.
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- 2023
27. Cannabidiol Add-On in Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-Related Drug-Resistant Epilepsy
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Antonella Riva, Gianluca D'Onofrio, Angelica Pisati, Roberta Roberti, Elisabetta Amadori, Friedrich Bosch, Carolina Fischinger Moura de Souza, Ashley Thomas, Emilio Russo, Pasquale Striano, and Allan Bayat
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Pharmacology ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) - Published
- 2023
28. The burden of illness in Lennox–Gastaut syndrome: a systematic literature review
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Adam Strzelczyk, Sameer M. Zuberi, Pasquale Striano, Felix Rosenow, and Susanne Schubert-Bast
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Pharmacology (medical) ,General Medicine ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Background Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (LGS) is a severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy characterized by drug-resistant epilepsy with multiple seizure types starting in childhood, a typical slow spike-wave pattern on electroencephalogram, and cognitive dysfunction. Methods We performed a systematic literature review according to the PRISMA guidelines to identify, synthesize and appraise the burden of illness in LGS (including “probable” LGS). Studies were identified by searching MEDLINE, Embase and APA PsychInfo, Cochrane’s database of systematic reviews, and Epistemonikos. The outcomes were epidemiology (incidence, prevalence or mortality), direct and indirect costs, healthcare resource utilization, and patient and caregiver health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Results The search identified 22 publications evaluating the epidemiology (n = 10), direct costs and resource (n = 10) and/or HRQoL (n = 5). No studies reporting on indirect costs were identified. With no specific ICD code for LGS in many regions, several studies had to rely upon indirect methods to identify their patient populations (e.g., algorithms to search insurance claims databases to identify “probable” LGS). There was heterogeneity between studies in how LGS was defined, the size of the populations, ages of the patients and length of the follow-up period. The prevalence varied from 4.2 to 60.8 per 100,000 people across studies for probable LGS and 2.9–28 per 100,000 for a confirmed/narrow definition of LGS. LGS was associated with high mortality rates compared to the general population and epilepsy population. Healthcare resource utilization and direct costs were substantial across all studies. Mean annual direct costs per person varied from $24,048 to $80,545 across studies, and home-based care and inpatient care were significant cost drivers. Studies showed that the HRQoL of patients and caregivers was adversely affected, although only a few studies were identified. In addition, studies suggested that seizure events were associated with higher costs and worse HRQoL. The risk of bias was low or moderate in most studies. Conclusions LGS is associated with a significant burden of illness featuring resistant seizures associated with higher costs and worse HRQoL. More research is needed, especially in evaluating indirect costs and caregiver burden, where there is a notable lack of studies.
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- 2023
29. A homozygous MED11 C-terminal variant causes a lethal neurodegenerative disease
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Elisa Calì 1, Sheng-Jia Lin 2, Clarissa Rocca 1, Yavuz Sahin 3, Aisha Al Shamsi 4, Salima El Chehadeh 5, Myriam Chaabouni 6, Kshitij Mankad 7, Evangelia Galanaki 1, Stephanie Efthymiou 1, Sniya Sudhakar 7, Alkyoni Athanasiou-Fragkouli 1, Tamer Çelik 8, Nejat Narlı 9, Sebastiano Bianca 10, David Murphy 11, Francisco Martins De Carvalho Moreira 12, SYNaPS Study Group, Andrea Accogli 13, Cassidy Petree 2, Kevin Huang 2, Kamel Monastiri 14, Masoud Edizadeh 3, Rosaria Nardello 11, Marzia Ognibene 15, Patrizia De Marco 15, Martino Ruggieri 16, Federico Zara 17, Pasquale Striano 18, Yavuz Şahin 19, Lihadh Al-Gazali 20, Marie Therese Abi Warde 21, Benedicte Gerard 22, Giovanni Zifarelli 23, Christian Beetz 23, Sara Fortuna 24, Miguel Soler 25, Enza Maria Valente 26, Gaurav Varshney 2, Reza Maroofian 1, Vincenzo Salpietro 27, Henry Houlden 1, Nardello. Rosaria, Elisa Calì 1, Sheng-Jia Lin 2, Clarissa Rocca 1, Yavuz Sahin 3, Aisha Al Shamsi 4, Salima El Chehadeh 5, Myriam Chaabouni 6, Kshitij Mankad 7, Evangelia Galanaki 1, Stephanie Efthymiou 1, Sniya Sudhakar 7, Alkyoni Athanasiou-Fragkouli 1, Tamer Çelik 8, Nejat Narlı 9, Sebastiano Bianca 10, David Murphy 11, Francisco Martins De Carvalho Moreira 12, SYNaPS Study Group, and Andrea Accogli 13, Cassidy Petree 2, Kevin Huang 2, Kamel Monastiri 14, Masoud Edizadeh 3, Rosaria Nardello 11, Marzia Ognibene 15, Patrizia De Marco 15, Martino Ruggieri 16, Federico Zara 17, Pasquale Striano 18, Yavuz Şahin 19, Lihadh Al-Gazali 20, Marie Therese Abi Warde 21, Benedicte Gerard 22, Giovanni Zifarelli 23, Christian Beetz 23, Sara Fortuna 24, Miguel Soler 25, Enza Maria Valente 26, Gaurav Varshney 2, Reza Maroofian 1, Vincenzo Salpietro 27, Henry Houlden 1, Nardello. Rosaria
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Human mediator complex ,MED11 ,MEDopathies - Abstract
Purpose: The mediator (MED) multisubunit-complex modulates the activity of the transcriptional machinery, and genetic defects in different MED subunits (17, 20, 27) have been implicated in neurologic diseases. In this study, we identified a recurrent homozygous variant in MED11 (c.325C>T; p.Arg109Ter) in 7 affected individuals from 5 unrelated families. Methods: To investigate the genetic cause of the disease, exome or genome sequencing were performed in 5 unrelated families identified via different research networks and Matchmaker Exchange. Deep clinical and brain imaging evaluations were performed by clinical pediatric neurologists and neuroradiologists. The functional effect of the candidate variant on both MED11 RNA and protein was assessed using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and western blotting using fibroblast cell lines derived from 1 affected individual and controls and through computational approaches. Knockouts in zebrafish were generated using clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/Cas9. Results: The disease was characterized by microcephaly, profound neurodevelopmental impairment, exaggerated startle response, myoclonic seizures, progressive widespread neurodegeneration, and premature death. Functional studies on patient-derived fibroblasts did not show a loss of protein function but rather disruption of the C-terminal of MED11, likely impairing binding to other MED subunits. A zebrafish knockout model recapitulates key clinical phenotypes. Conclusion: Loss of the C-terminal of MED subunit 11 may affect its binding efficiency to other MED subunits, thus implicating the MED-complex stability in brain development and neurodegeneration.
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- 2022
30. A randomized, double‐blind trial of triheptanoin for drug‐resistant epilepsy in glucose transporter 1 deficiency syndrome
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Pasquale Striano, Stéphane Auvin, Abigail Collins, Rita Horvath, Ingrid E. Scheffer, Michal Tzadok, Ian Miller, Mary Kay Koenig, Adrian Lacy, Ronald Davis, Angela Garcia‐Cazorla, Russell P. Saneto, Melanie Brandabur, Susan Blair, Tony Koutsoukos, and Darryl De Vivo
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Adult ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,Glucose Transporter Type 1 ,Adolescent ,Monosaccharide Transport Proteins ,Treatment Outcome ,Double-Blind Method ,Epilepsy, Absence ,Neurology ,Seizures ,Humans ,Anticonvulsants ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,Neurology (clinical) ,Child ,Triglycerides ,Carbohydrate Metabolism, Inborn Errors - Abstract
This study was undertaken to evaluate efficacy and long-term safety of triheptanoin in patients1 year old, not on a ketogenic diet, with drug-resistant seizures associated with glucose transporter 1 deficiency syndrome (Glut1DS).UX007G-CL201 was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Following a 6-week baseline period, eligible patients were randomized 3:1 to triheptanoin or placebo. Dosing was titrated to 35% of total daily calories over 2 weeks. After an 8-week placebo-controlled period, all patients received open-label triheptanoin through Week 52.The study included 36 patients (15 children, 13 adolescents, eight adults). A median 12.6% reduction in overall seizure frequency was observed in the triheptanoin arm relative to baseline, and a 13.5% difference was observed relative to placebo (p = .58). In patients with absence seizures only (n = 9), a median 62.2% reduction in seizure frequency was observed in the triheptanoin arm relative to baseline. Only one patient with absence seizures only was present in the control group, preventing comparison. No statistically significant differences in seizure frequency were observed. Common treatment-emergent adverse events included diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and nausea, mostly mild or moderate in severity. No serious adverse events were considered to be treatment related. One patient discontinued due to status epilepticus.Triheptanoin did not significantly reduce seizure frequency in patients with Glut1DS not on the ketogenic diet. Treatment was associated with mild to moderate gastrointestinal treatment-related events; most resolved following dose reduction or interruption and/or medication for treatment. Triheptanoin was not associated with any long-term safety concerns when administered at dose levels up to 35% of total daily caloric intake for up to 1 year.
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- 2022
31. Assessing the landscape of STXBP1-related disorders in 534 individuals
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Julie Xian, Shridhar Parthasarathy, Sarah M Ruggiero, Ganna Balagura, Eryn Fitch, Katherine Helbig, Jing Gan, Shiva Ganesan, Michael C Kaufman, Colin A Ellis, David Lewis-Smith, Peter Galer, Kristin Cunningham, Margaret O’Brien, Mahgenn Cosico, Kate Baker, Alejandra Darling, Fernanda Veiga de Goes, Christelle M El Achkar, Jan Henje Doering, Francesca Furia, Ángeles García-Cazorla, Elena Gardella, Lisa Geertjens, Courtney Klein, Anna Kolesnik-Taylor, Hanna Lammertse, Jeehun Lee, Alexandra Mackie, Mala Misra-Isrie, Heather Olson, Emma Sexton, Beth Sheidley, Lacey Smith, Luiza Sotero, Hannah Stamberger, Steffen Syrbe, Kim Marie Thalwitzer, Annemiek van Berkel, Mieke van Haelst, Christopher Yuskaitis, Sarah Weckhuysen, Ben Prosser, Charlene Son Rigby, Scott Demarest, Samuel Pierce, Yuehua Zhang, Rikke S Møller, Hilgo Bruining, Annapurna Poduri, Federico Zara, Matthijs Verhage, Pasquale Striano, Ingo Helbig, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry & Psychosocial Care, APH - Digital Health, APH - Mental Health, VU University medical center, Clinical genetics, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Complex Trait Genetics, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Cellular & Molecular Mechanisms, Xian, Julie [0000-0002-0205-0648], Ruggiero, Sarah M [0000-0002-0834-0750], Balagura, Ganna [0000-0003-0212-8318], Helbig, Katherine [0000-0001-8249-0549], Kaufman, Michael C [0000-0003-2718-296X], Lewis-Smith, David [0000-0002-1735-8178], Gardella, Elena [0000-0002-7138-6022], Olson, Heather [0000-0002-5385-0119], Weckhuysen, Sarah [0000-0003-2878-1147], Verhage, Matthijs [0000-0002-5452-5000], Helbig, Ingo [0000-0001-8486-0558], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Human genetics, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), and Functional Genomics
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0303 health sciences ,STXBP1 ,Human Phenotype Ontology ,developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ,epilepsy ,genetics ,Electroencephalography ,Humans ,Infant ,Munc18 Proteins ,Retrospective Studies ,Seizures ,Epilepsy ,Spasms, Infantile ,Infantile ,Spasms ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Disease-causing variants in STXBP1 are among the most common genetic causes of neurodevelopmental disorders. However, the phenotypic spectrum in STXBP1-related disorders is wide and clear correlations between variant type and clinical features have not been observed so far. Here, we harmonized clinical data across 534 individuals with STXBP1-related disorders and analysed 19 973 derived phenotypic terms, including phenotypes of 253 individuals previously unreported in the scientific literature. The overall phenotypic landscape in STXBP1-related disorders is characterized by neurodevelopmental abnormalities in 95% and seizures in 89% of individuals, including focal-onset seizures as the most common seizure type (47%). More than 88% of individuals with STXBP1-related disorders have seizure onset in the first year of life, including neonatal seizure onset in 47%. Individuals with protein-truncating variants and deletions in STXBP1 (n = 261) were almost twice as likely to present with West syndrome and were more phenotypically similar than expected by chance. Five genetic hotspots with recurrent variants were identified in more than 10 individuals, including p.Arg406Cys/His (n = 40), p.Arg292Cys/His/Leu/Pro (n = 30), p.Arg551Cys/Gly/His/Leu (n = 24), p.Pro139Leu (n = 12), and p.Arg190Trp (n = 11). None of the recurrent variants were significantly associated with distinct electroclinical syndromes, single phenotypic features, or showed overall clinical similarity, indicating that the baseline variability in STXBP1-related disorders is too high for discrete phenotypic subgroups to emerge. We then reconstructed the seizure history in 62 individuals with STXBP1-related disorders in detail, retrospectively assigning seizure type and seizure frequency monthly across 4433 time intervals, and retrieved 251 anti-seizure medication prescriptions from the electronic medical records. We demonstrate a dynamic pattern of seizure control and complex interplay with response to specific medications particularly in the first year of life when seizures in STXBP1-related disorders are the most prominent. Adrenocorticotropic hormone and phenobarbital were more likely to initially reduce seizure frequency in infantile spasms and focal seizures compared to other treatment options, while the ketogenic diet was most effective in maintaining seizure freedom. In summary, we demonstrate how the multidimensional spectrum of phenotypic features in STXBP1-related disorders can be assessed using a computational phenotype framework to facilitate the development of future precision-medicine approaches.
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- 2022
32. Biallelic ADAM22 pathogenic variants cause progressive encephalopathy and infantile-onset refractory epilepsy
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Marieke M van der Knoop, Reza Maroofian, Yuko Fukata, Yvette van Ierland, Ehsan G Karimiani, Anna Elina Lehesjoki, Mikko Muona, Anders Paetau, Yuri Miyazaki, Yoko Hirano, Laila Selim, Marina de França, Rodrigo Ambrosio Fock, Christian Beetz, Claudia A L Ruivenkamp, Alison J Eaton, Francois D Morneau-Jacob, Lena Sagi-Dain, Lilach Shemer-Meiri, Amir Peleg, Jumana Haddad-Halloun, Daan J Kamphuis, Cacha M P C D Peeters-Scholte, Semra Hiz Kurul, Rita Horvath, Hanns Lochmüller, David Murphy, Stephan Waldmüller, Stephanie Spranger, David Overberg, Alison M Muir, Aboulfazl Rad, Barbara Vona, Firdous Abdulwahad, Sateesh Maddirevula, Inna S Povolotskaya, Victoria Y Voinova, Vykuntaraju K Gowda, Varunvenkat M Srinivasan, Fowzan S Alkuraya, Heather C Mefford, Majid Alfadhel, Tobias B Haack, Pasquale Striano, Mariasavina Severino, Masaki Fukata, Yvonne Hilhorst-Hofstee, Henry Houlden, Neurology, Clinical Genetics, Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics, University of Helsinki, Medicum, HUSLAB, and Department of Pathology
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Brain Diseases ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,CYSTIC-FIBROSIS ,GENES ,LEUCINE-RICH ,3112 Neurosciences ,ADAM22 ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,PROTEIN ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,PHENOTYPE ,3124 Neurology and psychiatry ,refractory seizures ,ADAM Proteins ,Humans ,SEIZURES ,LGI1 ,LIMBIC ENCEPHALITIS ,Neurology (clinical) ,developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ,Atrophy ,Epilèpsia en els infants ,Disks Large Homolog 4 Protein - Abstract
Data de publicació electrònica: 04-04-2022 Pathogenic variants in A Disintegrin And Metalloproteinase (ADAM) 22, the postsynaptic cell membrane receptor for the glycoprotein leucine-rich repeat glioma-inactivated protein 1 (LGI1), have been recently associated with recessive developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. However, so far, only two affected individuals have been described and many features of this disorder are unknown. We refine the phenotype and report 19 additional individuals harboring compound heterozygous or homozygous inactivating ADAM22 variants, of whom 18 had clinical data available. Additionally, we provide follow-up data from two previously reported cases. All affected individuals exhibited infantile-onset, treatment-resistant epilepsy. Additional clinical features included moderate to profound global developmental delay/intellectual disability (20/20), hypotonia (12/20), delayed motor development (19/20). Brain MRI findings included cerebral atrophy (13/20), supported by post-mortem histological examination in patient-derived brain tissue, cerebellar vermis atrophy (5/20), and callosal hypoplasia (4/20). Functional studies in transfected cell lines confirmed the deleteriousness of all identified variants and indicated at least three distinct pathological mechanisms: defective cell membrane expression (1), impaired LGI1-binding (2), and/or impaired interaction with the postsynaptic density protein PSD-95 (3). We reveal novel clinical and molecular hallmarks of ADAM22 deficiency and provide knowledge that might inform clinical management and early diagnostics. Funding: most families were collected as part of the SYNaPS Study Group collaboration funded by the Wellcome Trust and strategic award (Synaptopathies) funding (WT093205 MA and WT104033AIA). This study was also supported by JSPS/MEXT KAKENHI (Grants 19H03331, 19K22439 and 21K19390 to Y.F., Grant 19K16269 to Y.M., and Grants 20H00459 and 20H04915 to M.F.) and Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (21wm0525022h0001 to Y.F.); intramural funding (fortüne) from the University of Tübingen (Grant 2545-1-0) and the Ministry of Science, Research and Art Baden-Württemberg to B.V. P.S. contributed to this work within the framework of the DINOGMI Department of Excellence of MIUR 2018-2022 (legge 232 del 2016). T.B.H. was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – 418081722, 433158657. I.S.P., V.Y.V. are supported by the Government Assignment of the Russian Ministry of Health (#121061500066-2). HL receives support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (Foundation Grant FDN-167281), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Muscular Dystrophy Canada (Network Catalyst Grant for NMD4C), the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI-JELF 38412), and the Canada Research Chairs program (Canada Research Chair in Neuromuscular Genomics and Health, 950-232279). S.H. is funded by TUBITAK (Turkish Scientific and Technological Research Council) Project number 216S771. R.H. is a Wellcome Trust Investigator (109915/Z/15/Z), who received support from the Medical Research Council (UK) (MR/N025431/1 and MR/V009346/1), the European Research Council (309548), the Newton Fund (UK/Turkey, MR/N027302/1), the Addenbrookes Charitable Trust (G100142), the Evelyn Trust, the Stoneygate Trust, the Lily Foundation and an MRC strategic award to establish an International Centre for Genomic Medicine in Neuromuscular Diseases (ICGNMD) MR/S005021/1. This research was supported by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (BRC-1215-20014)
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- 2022
33. PIGN encephalopathy: Characterizing the epileptology
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Allan Bayat, Guillem de Valles‐Ibáñez, Manuela Pendziwiat, Alexej Knaus, Kerstin Alt, Elisa Biamino, Annette Bley, Sophie Calvert, Patrick Carney, Alfonso Caro‐Llopis, Berten Ceulemans, Janice Cousin, Suzanne Davis, Vincent des Portes, Patrick Edery, Eleina England, Carlos Ferreira, Jeremy Freeman, Blanca Gener, Magali Gorce, Delphine Heron, Michael S. Hildebrand, Aleksandra Jezela‐Stanek, Pierre‐Simon Jouk, Boris Keren, Katja Kloth, Gerhard Kluger, Marius Kuhn, Johannes R. Lemke, Hong Li, Francisco Martinez, Caroline Maxton, Heather C. Mefford, Giuseppe Merla, Hanna Mierzewska, Alison Muir, Sandra Monfort, Joost Nicolai, Jennifer Norman, Gina O'Grady, Barbara Oleksy, Carmen Orellana, Laura Elena Orec, Charlotte Peinhardt, Ewa Pronicka, Monica Rosello, Fernando Santos‐Simarro, Eva Maria Christina Schwaibold, Alexander P. A. Stegmann, Constance T. Stumpel, Elzbieta Szczepanik, Iwona Terczyńska, Julien Thevenon, Andreas Tzschach, Patrick Van Bogaert, Roberta Vittorini, Sonja Walsh, Sarah Weckhuysen, Barbara Weissman, Lynne Wolfe, Alexandre Reymond, Pasquelena De Nittis, Annapurna Poduri, Heather Olson, Pasquale Striano, Gaetan Lesca, Ingrid E. Scheffer, Rikke S. Møller, Lynette G. Sadleir, RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, Klinische Neurowetenschappen, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Neurologie (9), and MUMC+: DA KG Lab Specialisten (9)
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Epilepsy/diagnostic imaging ,Drug Resistant Epilepsy ,PROTEINS ,Electroencephalography ,Intellectual Disability/diagnostic imaging ,HYPOTONIA-SEIZURES SYNDROME ,PHENOTYPE ,congenital disorder of glycosylation ,CONGENITAL-ANOMALIES ,Phenotype ,Neurology ,Seizures ,intellectual disability ,Humans ,epilepsy ,Female ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,developmental and epileptic encephalopathy ,PRENATAL-DIAGNOSIS ,Seizures/genetics ,GPI-anchoring disorder ,MUTATION - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Epilepsy is common in patients with PIGN diseases due to biallelic variants; however, limited epilepsy phenotyping data have been reported. We describe the epileptology of PIGN encephalopathy. METHODS: We recruited patients with epilepsy due to biallelic PIGN variants and obtained clinical data regarding age at seizure onset/offset and semiology, development, medical history, examination, electroencephalogram, neuroimaging, and treatment. Seizure and epilepsy types were classified. RESULTS: Twenty six patients (13 female) from 26 families were identified, with mean age 7 years (range = 1 month to 21 years; three deceased). Abnormal development at seizure onset was present in 25 of 26. Developmental outcome was most frequently profound (14/26) or severe (11/26). Patients presented with focal motor (12/26), unknown onset motor (5/26), focal impaired awareness (1/26), absence (2/26), myoclonic (2/26), myoclonic-atonic (1/26), and generalized tonic-clonic (2/26) seizures. Twenty of 26 were classified as developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE): 55% (11/20) focal DEE, 30% (6/20) generalized DEE, and 15% (3/20) combined DEE. Six had intellectual disability and epilepsy (ID+E): two generalized and four focal epilepsy. Mean age at seizure onset was 13 months (birth to 10 years), with a lower mean onset in DEE (7 months) compared with ID+E (33 months). Patients with DEE had drug-resistant epilepsy, compared to 4/6 ID+E patients, who were seizure-free. Hyperkinetic movement disorder occurred in 13 of 26 patients. Twenty-seven of 34 variants were novel. Variants were truncating (n = 7), intronic and predicted to affect splicing (n = 7), and missense or inframe indels (n = 20, of which 11 were predicted to affect splicing). Seven variants were recurrent, including p.Leu311Trp in 10 unrelated patients, nine with generalized seizures, accounting for nine of the 11 patients in this cohort with generalized seizures. SIGNIFICANCE: PIGN encephalopathy is a complex autosomal recessive disorder associated with a wide spectrum of epilepsy phenotypes, typically with substantial profound to severe developmental impairment.
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- 2022
34. What is known Today about Nutrition and Microbiota
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Paolo Mainardi, Pasquale Striano, Michele Mainardi, and Paolo Carta
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Geography, Planning and Development ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law - Abstract
We are experiencing years of profound cultural revolution. New insights into the microbiota upset concepts in physiology, medicine, and nutrition. The role of the microbiota for our health is increasingly evident. We are increasingly certain that our health depends on that of the microbiota, or, rather, on its strength in controlling the physiology of body organs, the mechanisms of repair and protection. It is not so much a pathogen that makes us fall ill, but a reduced ability to protect and repair ourselves from damage produced by pathogens that affect us continually. Current knowledge leads us to a new medicine aimed at curing the microbiota so that it can (come back to) take care of us. In this new medicine, food rediscovers a fundamental role, since it is the best way to communicate with the microbiota, to modulate and strengthen it. And it is curious how the most recent acquisitions bring us back to the past, to an ancient medicine, which we had forgotten after the discovery of drugs, imagined capable of acting on complex pathogenetic mechanisms. By acting, more simply, on the microbiota we can activate powerful endogenous mechanisms, which keep us healthy, when we are, more powerful than any drug we can invent. Now there is nothing left to do but apply the new knowledge.
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- 2022
35. Ocular phenotype and electroretinogram abnormalities in Lafora disease and correlation with disease stage
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Alessandro Orsini, Daniele Ferrari, Antonella Riva, Andrea Santangelo, Angelo Macrì, Elena Freri, Laura Canafoglia, Alfredo D’Aniello, Giancarlo Di Gennaro, Gabriele Massimetti, Carlo Minetti, Federico Zara, Roberto Michelucci, Anupreet Tumber, Ajoy Vincent, Berge Arakel Minassian, and Pasquale Striano
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Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,Retinal alterations ,Myoclonic Epilepsies, Progressive ,Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Non-Receptor ,FFERG ,Lafora disease ,Neurodegeneration ,Progressive myoclonus ,Phenotype ,Neurology ,Mutation ,Humans ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background Lafora disease (LD) is a neurodegenerative disorder featuring action and stimulus-sensitive myoclonus, epilepsy, and cognitive deterioration. Mutations in the EPM2A/EPM2B genes classically prove causative for the disease in most cases. Since full-field electroretinogram (ffERG) may reveal early-stage changes in a wide spectrum of diseases, we aimed to evaluate retinal cones and rods dysfunction in a cohort of Italian LD patients. Methods Patients with genetically confirmed LD were recruited and subjected to ffERG analysis following the International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV) protocol. Results Six patients aged between 13 and 26 years (mean 19.5 years) were included. The mean age at disease onset was 12.5 years with a mean disease duration of 7 years. The ffERG analysis revealed a global mild to severe generalized cones dysfunction in all patients. Linear correlation was identified between disease stage and the degree of cones and rods dysfunction, as well as between the type of mutation and the cones and rods dysfunction. Conclusions This study brings further evidence of early retinal alterations in LD patients. The cones and rods dysfunction grade is related to disease duration. The ffERG is an important tool to determine the disease stage, allowing to evaluate either natural or treatment-related disease progression in a minimally invasive way.
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- 2022
36. Video game-induced reflex seizures via a smartphone
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Erika Rebessi, Eliana Parente, Antonino Romeo, Antonella Riva, Pasquale Striano, and Maurizio Viri
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Myoclonic Jerk ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Electroencephalography ,medicine.disease ,Reflex seizure ,Epilepsy ,Neurology ,Mobile phone ,medicine ,Reflex ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,human activities ,Video game - Abstract
Reflex seizures are consistently evoked by a specific afferent stimulus or by patient activity. Patients experiencing reflex seizures when playing a game on a mobile phone are rarely reported. We describe a boy with reflex seizures after prolonged exposure to the game, Cut the rope, on his mobile phone. The video-EEG documented electroclinical events characterized by distal myoclonic jerks of the upper limbs, in combination with irregular, diffuse spike-and-wave and polyspike-and-wave discharges on EEG, followed by a tonic-clonic seizure. Playing video games on mobile phones may potentially induce reflex seizures, similar to other commonly used platforms such as docking stations connected to video screens.
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- 2022
37. Current and promising therapeutic options for Dravet syndrome
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Antonella Riva, Gianluca D’Onofrio, Elisabetta Amadori, Domenico Tripodi, Ganna Balagura, Valentina Iurilli, Maria Stella Vari, Alberto Verrotti, and Pasquale Striano
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Pharmacology ,pharmacotherapy ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,gene editing ,Humans ,epilepsy ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Epilepsies, Myoclonic ,General Medicine ,Spasms, Infantile ,Epileptic Syndromes ,Dravet syndrome - Abstract
Introduction: Dravet Syndrome (DS) is a developmental and epileptic encephalopathy carrying high-level psychobehavioral burdens. Although the disease has been known for almost 4 decades, and despite significant progress in the understanding of its physiopathology and natural course, the pharmacological treatment leaves patients and caregivers with significant unmet needs. This review provides a summary of the current and promising therapeutic options for DS Areas covered: PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov were screened using ‘Dravet Syndrome’ OR ‘DS,’ AND ‘pharmacotherapy,’ AND ‘treatments.’ Randomized clinical trials, structured reviews, and meta-analyses were selected for in-human application of well-known anti-seizure medications; while in-vivo experiments on models of DS were selected to evaluate the potential of new therapeutic strategies. Expert opinion: The search for new pharmacological treatment options is led by the need for care and defeat of the natural course of the disease, an aspect still largely neglected by the available therapeutic strategies. Yet, the last 6 years have led to a climate of increased interest and availability of clinical trials. Particularly, gene therapy could hopefully prevent DS evolution by directly relieving the specific genetic defect, although the possibility of off-target editing, and the uneasy administration route have still largely prevented its use.
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- 2022
38. A nationwide study on Sydenham's chorea: Clinical features, treatment and prognostic factors
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Piero Pavone, Patrizia Dassi, Chiara Marra, Clara Malattia, Anna Fetta, Irene Bagnasco, Alberto Verrotti, Alessandro Orsini, Filippo Greco, Alice Bonuccelli, Salvatore Savasta, Stefano Sartori, Patrizia Bergonzini, Mariasole Magistrali, Bernadette Marrè Brunenghi, Daniele Marcotulli, Rita Consolini, Carlotta Canavese, Diego Peroni, Elisa De Grandis, Margherita Nosadini, Niccolò Carli, Gian Luigi Marseglia, Maurizio Viri, Thomas Foiadelli, Duccio Maria Cordelli, Francesco Nicita, Francesco Bassanese, Gabriele Simonini, Sabrina Siquilini, Francesca Marchese, Amanda Papa, Pasquale Striano, Alessandro Capuano, and Sara Matricardi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Sydenham's chorea ,Disease ,Lower risk ,Chorea ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Retrospective Studies ,Subclinical infection ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Carditis ,General Medicine ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Neurology (clinical) ,Rheumatic Fever ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Anxiety disorder - Abstract
Sydenham's Chorea (SC) is a neuropsychiatric disorder and a major manifestation of acute rheumatic fever. The erroneous assumption that SC is a benign and self-limiting disease, has led to a lack of high-quality scientific evidence of the therapeutical and prognostic features of SC.We retrospectively analyzed the medical records of patients18-years old with SC in 17 Italian pediatric centers. Recorded data included clinical, instrumental and laboratory parameters. Prognostic risk factors including treatment regimens were assessed with univariate and multivariate sub-analysis.We included 171 patients with SC. 66% had generalized chorea, and 34% hemichorea. 81% had carditis (subclinical in 65%). Additional neurological symptoms were reported in 60% of the patients, mainly dysarthria and dysgraphia. 51% had neuropsychiatric symptoms at onset, which persisted after 12 months in 10%. Among psychiatric manifestations, the most common was anxiety disorder/depression (77%). Neurological remission was reached by 93% of the patients at 6 months; 9% relapsed. Patients were treated as follows: 11% penicillin alone, 37% immunomodulatory therapy, 16% symptomatic drugs (i.e. anti-seizure medication, dopamine antagonists) and 37% both symptomatic and immunomodulatory treatment. Neurological outcome did not differ between groups. Patients receiving symptomatic drugs had a higher risk of relapse on multivariate analysis (p = 0.045).Treatment of SC was largely heterogeneous. Based on our results, immunomodulatory therapy did not show higher efficacy at medium term, although it was associated to a slightly lower risk of relapse compared to symptomatic therapy. Longitudinal studies are needed to assess specific risk factors and best treatment options.
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- 2022
39. A solved puzzle: Familial adult myoclonus epilepsy is a new expansion repeats disorder
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Antonietta Coppola, Leonilda Bilo, and Pasquale Striano
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
40. Case report: Revascularization failure in NF1-related moyamoya syndrome after selumetinib: A possible pathophysiological correlation?
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Cristina Chelleri, Marcello Scala, Patrizia De Marco, Monica Traverso, Marzia Ognibene, Irene Bruno, Gianluca Piccolo, Pasquale Striano, Mariasavina Severino, Federico Zara, Maria Cristina Diana, and Marco Pavanello
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a neurocutaneous syndrome caused by pathogenic variants in the NF1 gene, encoding a multidomain inhibitor of Ras activity. Thus, NF1 is considered a RASopathy and drugs targeting the RAS/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway, such as the MAP kinase (MEK) 1/2 inhibitor Selumetinib, are promising therapeutic options to treat NF1-associated tumors, especially plexiform neurofibromas and optic way gliomas. However, surgical treatment is often required for NF1-related cerebrovascular manifestations, such as moyamoya syndrome (MMS). We report a case of an 8-year-old patient receiving Selumetinib at the dose of 25 mg/m2 orally 2 times a day as a treatment for many plexiform neurofibromas. He suffered from two close strokes and brain MRI revealed a severe cerebral vasculopathy consistent with MMS, with marked stenosis of both the internal carotid arteries. A two-step surgical revascularization procedure was performed, consisting of a direct by-pass with an encephalo-mio-synangiosis (EMS) followed by encephalo-duro-arterio-synangiosis (EDAS). Surprisingly, despite the surgical technical success, follow-up MRI revealed lack of the expected revascularization. Selumetinib is a powerful therapeutic option in the treatment of severe NF1-related tumors. However, our findings suggest that this drug may interfere with cerebral neovascularization in patients with MMS requiring surgical revascularization. This is supported by the crucial role of the Vascular-Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF), whose signaling pathway involve MAPK, as promoter of the neovascularization. Our observations suggest to adopt an imaging surveillance strategy to prevent unfavorable surgical outcome in patients with NF1-associated MMS receiving Selumetinib, and that priority should be given to surgical revascularization.
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- 2023
41. History of familial adult myoclonus epilepsy/benign adult familial myoclonic epilepsy around the world
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Samuel F. Berkovic, Pasquale Striano, and Shoji Tsuji
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Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
42. Case report: LAMC3-associated cortical malformations: Case report of a novel stop-gain variant and literature review
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Giovanni Falcicchio, Antonella Riva, Angela La Neve, Michele Iacomino, Patrizia Lastella, Patrizia Suppressa, Vittorio Sciruicchio, Maria Trojano, and Pasquale Striano
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Genetics ,Molecular Medicine ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
Background: Malformations of cortical development (MCDs) can lead to peculiar neuroradiological patterns and clinical presentations (i.e., seizures, cerebral palsy, and intellectual disability) according to the specific genetic pathway of the brain development involved; and yet a certain degree of phenotypic heterogeneity exists even when the same gene is affected. Here we report a man with an malformations of cortical development extending beyond occipital lobes associated with a novel stop-gain variant in LAMC3.Case presentation: The patient is a 28-year-old man suffering from drug-resistant epilepsy and moderate intellectual disability. He underwent a brain magnetic resonance imaging showing polymicrogyria involving occipital and temporal lobes bilaterally. After performing exome sequencing, a novel stop-gain variant in LAMC3 (c.3871C>T; p. Arg1291*) was identified. According to the cortical alteration of the temporal regions, temporal seizures were detected; instead, the patient did not report occipital seizures. Different pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions (i.e., vagus nerve stimulation) were unsuccessful, even though a partial seizure reduction was obtained after cenobamate administration.Conclusion: Our case report confirms that variants of a gene known to be related to specific clinical and neuroradiological pictures can unexpectedly lead to new phenotypes involving different areas of the brain.
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- 2023
43. Clinical and Neurophysiological Phenotypes in Neonates With
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Evelina, Carapancea, Marie-Coralie, Cornet, Mathieu, Milh, Lucrezia, De Cosmo, Eric J, Huang, Tiziana, Granata, Pasquale, Striano, Berten, Ceulemans, Anja, Stein, Deborah, Morris-Rosendahl, Greta, Conti, Nipa, Mitra, F Lucy, Raymond, David H, Rowitch, Roberta, Solazzi, Fabiana, Vercellino, Paola, De Liso, Gianluca, D'Onofrio, Clementina, Boniver, Olivier, Danhaive, Katherine, Carkeek, Vincenzo, Salpietro, Sarah, Weckhuysen, Marny, Fedrigo, Annalisa, Angelini, Barbara, Castellotti, Damien, Lederer, Valerie, Benoit, Federico, Raviglione, Renzo, Guerrini, Robertino, Dilena, and Maria Roberta, Cilio
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Research Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: BRAT1 encephalopathy is an ultra-rare autosomal recessive neonatal encephalopathy. We delineate the neonatal electroclinical phenotype at presentation and provide insights for early diagnosis. METHODS: Through a multinational collaborative, we studied a cohort of neonates with encephalopathy associated with biallelic pathogenic variants in BRAT1 for whom detailed clinical, neurophysiologic, and neuroimaging information was available from the onset of symptoms. Neuropathologic changes were also analyzed. RESULTS: We included 19 neonates. Most neonates were born at term (16/19) from nonconsanguineous parents. 15/19 (79%) were admitted soon after birth to a neonatal intensive care unit, exhibiting multifocal myoclonus, both spontaneous and exacerbated by stimulation. 7/19 (37%) had arthrogryposis at birth, and all except 1 progressively developed hypertonia in the first week of life. Multifocal myoclonus, which was present in all but 1 infant, was the most prominent manifestation and did not show any EEG correlate in 16/19 (84%). Video-EEG at onset was unremarkable in 14/19 (74%) infants, and 6 (33%) had initially been misdiagnosed with hyperekplexia. Multifocal seizures were observed at a median age of 14 days (range: 1–29). During the first months of life, all infants developed progressive encephalopathy, acquired microcephaly, prolonged bouts of apnea, and bradycardia, leading to cardiac arrest and death at a median age of 3.5 months (range: 20 days to 30 months). Only 7 infants (37%) received a definite diagnosis before death, at a median age of 34 days (range: 25–126), and almost two-thirds (12/19, 63%) were diagnosed 8 days to 12 years postmortem (median: 6.5 years). Neuropathology examination, performed in 3 patients, revealed severely delayed myelination and diffuse astrogliosis, sparing the upper cortical layers. DISCUSSION: BRAT1 encephalopathy is a neonatal-onset, rapidly progressive neurologic disorder. Neonates are often misdiagnosed as having hyperekplexia, and many die undiagnosed. The key phenotypic features are multifocal myoclonus, an organized EEG, progressive, persistent, and diffuse hypertonia, and an evolution into refractory multifocal seizures, prolonged bouts of apnea, bradycardia, and early death. Early recognition of BRAT1 encephalopathy allows for prompt workup, appropriate management, and genetic counseling.
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- 2023
44. Efficacy and Safety of Fenfluramine in Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
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Payam Tabaee Damavandi, Natalia Fabin, Riccardo Giossi, Sara Matricardi, Cinzia Del Giovane, Pasquale Striano, Stefano Meletti, Francesco Brigo, Eugen Trinka, Simona Lattanzi, Tabaee Damavandi, P, Fabin, N, Giossi, R, Matricardi, S, Del Giovane, C, Striano, P, Meletti, S, Brigo, F, Trinka, E, and Lattanzi, S
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Dravet syndrome ,Epilepsy ,Fenfluramine ,Lennox–Gastaut syndrome ,Seizures ,610 Medicine & health ,Seizure ,Neurology ,360 Social problems & social services ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Fenfluramine (FFA) is an amphetamine derivative that promotes the release and blocks the neuronal reuptake of serotonin. Initially introduced as an appetite suppressant, FFA also showed antiseizure properties. This systematic review aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of FFA for the treatment of seizures in patients with epilepsy. METHODS We systematically searched (in week 3 of June 2022) MEDLINE, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and the US National Institutes of Health Clinical Trials Registry. Randomized, double- or single-blinded, placebo-controlled studies of FFA in patients with epilepsy and uncontrolled seizures were identified. Efficacy outcomes included the proportions of patients with ≥ 50% and 100% reductions in baseline seizure frequency during the treatment period. Tolerability outcomes included the proportions of patients who withdrew from treatment for any reason and suffered adverse events (AEs). The risk of bias in the included studies was assessed according to the recommendations of the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions. The risk ratio (RR) along with the 95% confidence interval (CI) were estimated for each outcome. RESULTS Three trials were identified and a total of 469 Dravet syndrome (DS) and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) subjects were randomized. All three trials were judged to be at low risk of biases. In patients with DS, the RRs for ≥ 50% and 100% reductions in convulsive seizure frequency for the FFA group compared to placebo were 5.61 (95% CI 2.73-11.54) and 4.71 (95% CI 0.57-39.30), respectively. In patients with LGS, the corresponding RRs for ≥ 50% and 100% reductions in drop seizure frequency were 2.58 (95% CI 1.33-5.02) and 0.50 (95% CI 0.031-7.81), respectively. The drug was withdrawn for any reason in 10.1% and 5.8% of patients receiving FFA and placebo, respectively (RR 1.79, 95% CI 0.89-3.59). Treatment discontinuation due to AEs occurred in 5.4% and 1.2% of FFA- and placebo-treated patients, respectively (RR 3.63, 95% CI 0.93-14.16). Decreased appetite, diarrhoea, fatigue, and weight loss were AEs associated with FFA treatment. CONCLUSION Fenfluramine reduces the frequency of seizures in patients with DS and LGS. Decreased appetite, diarrhoea, fatigue, and weight loss are non-cardiovascular AEs associated with FFA.
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- 2023
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45. Perampanel as Precision Therapy in Rare Genetic Epilepsies
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Andreea Nissenkorn, Gerhard Kluger, Susanne Schubert‐Bast, Allan Bayat, Marya Bobylova, Paolo Bonanni, Berten Ceulemans, Antonietta Coppola, Carlo Di Bonaventura, Martha Feucht, Anne Fuchs, Gudrun Gröppel, Gali Heimer, Brigitte Herdt, Sviatlana Kulikova, Konstantin Mukhin, Stefania Nicassio, Alessandro Orsini, Maria Panagiotou, Milka Pringsheim, Burkhard Puest, Olga Pylaeva, Georgia Ramantani, Maria Tsekoura, Paolo Ricciardelli, Tally Lerman Sagie, Brigit Stark, Pasquale Striano, Andreas van Baalen, Matthias De Wachter, Emanuele Cerulli Irelli, Claudia Cuccurullo, Celina von Stülpnagel, and Angelo Russo
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Perampanel ,genetic epilepsies ,precision therapy ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,Human medicine - Abstract
ObjectivePerampanel, an antiseizure drug with alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor antagonist properties, may have a targeted effect in genetic epilepsies with overwhelming glutamate receptor activation. Epilepsies with loss of gamma-aminobutyric acid inhibition (e.g., SCN1A), overactive excitatory neurons (e.g., SCN2A, SCN8A), and variants in glutamate receptors (e.g., GRIN2A) hold special interest. We aimed to collect data from a large rare genetic epilepsy cohort treated with perampanel, to detect possible subgroups with high efficacy. MethodsThis multicenter project was based on the framework of NETRE (Network for Therapy in Rare Epilepsies), a web of pediatric neurologists treating rare epilepsies. Retrospective data from patients with genetic epilepsies treated with perampanel were collected. Outcome measures were responder rate (50% seizure reduction), and percentage of seizure reduction after 3 months of treatment. Subgroups of etiologies with high efficacy were identified. ResultsA total of 137 patients with 79 different etiologies, aged 2 months to 61 years (mean = 15.48 +/- 9.9 years), were enrolled. The mean dosage was 6.45 +/- 2.47 mg, and treatment period was 2.0 +/- 1.78 years (1.5 months-8 years). Sixty-two patients (44.9%) were treated for >2 years. Ninety-eight patients (71%) were responders, and 93 (67.4%) chose to continue therapy. The mean reduction in seizure frequency was 56.61% +/- 34.36%. Sixty patients (43.5%) sustained >75% reduction in seizure frequency, including 38 (27.5%) with >90% reduction in seizure frequency. The following genes showed high treatment efficacy: SCN1A, GNAO1, PIGA, PCDH19, SYNGAP1, POLG1, POLG2, and NEU1. Eleven of 17 (64.7%) patients with Dravet syndrome due to an SCN1A pathogenic variant were responders to perampanel treatment; 35.3% of them had >90% seizure reduction. Other etiologies remarkable for >90% reduction in seizures were GNAO1 and PIGA. Fourteen patients had a continuous spike and wave during sleep electroencephalographic pattern, and in six subjects perampanel reduced epileptiform activity. SignificancePerampanel demonstrated high safety and efficacy in patients with rare genetic epilepsies, especially in SCN1A, GNAO1, PIGA, PCDH19, SYNGAP1, CDKL5, NEU1, and POLG, suggesting a targeted effect related to glutamate transmission.
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- 2023
46. Translational veterinary epilepsy: A win-win situation for human and veterinary neurology
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Marios Charalambous, Andrea Fischer, Heidrun Potschka, Matthew C. Walker, Robrecht Raedt, Kristl Vonck, Paul Boon, Hannes Lohi, Wolfgang Löscher, Gregory Worrell, Tosso Leeb, Andrew McEvoy, Pasquale Striano, Gerhard Kluger, Aristea S. Galanopoulou, Holger A. Volk, and Sofie F.M. Bhatti
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General Veterinary ,Animal Science and Zoology ,630 Landwirtschaft ,590 Tiere (Zoologie) - Abstract
Epilepsy is a challenging multifactorial disorder with a complex genetic background. Our current understanding of the pathophysiology and treatment of epilepsy has substantially increased due to animal model studies, including canine studies, but additional basic and clinical research is required. Drug-resistant epilepsy is an important problem in both dogs and humans, since seizure freedom is not achieved with the available antiseizure medications. The evaluation and exploration of pharmacological and particularly non-pharmacological therapeutic options need to remain a priority in epilepsy research. Combined efforts and sharing knowledge and expertise between human medical and veterinary neurologists are important for improving the treatment outcomes or even curing epilepsy in dogs. Such interactions could offer an exciting approach to translate the knowledge gained from people and rodents to dogs and vice versa. In this article, a panel of experts discusses the similarities and knowledge gaps in human and animal epileptology, with the aim of establishing a common framework and the basis for future translational epilepsy research.
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- 2023
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47. Clinical and Neurophysiologic Phenotypes in Neonates with BRAT1 Encephalopathy
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Evelina Carapancea, Marie-Coralie Cornet, Mathieu Milh, Lucrezia De Cosmo, Eric J. Huang, Tiziana Granata, Pasquale Striano, Berten Ceulemans, Anja Stein, Deborah Morris-Rosendahl, Greta Conti, Nipa Mitra, F. Lucy Raymond, David H. Rowitch, Roberta Solazzi, Fabiana Vercellino, Paola De Liso, Gianluca D'Onofrio, Clementina Boniver, Olivier Danhaive, Katherine Carkeek, Vincenzo Salpietro, Sarah Weckhuysen, Marny Fedrigo, Annalisa Angelini, Barbara Castellotti, Damien Lederer, Valerie Benoit, Federico Raviglione, Renzo Guerrini, Robertino Dilena, and Maria Roberta Cilio
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Myoclonus ,Pediatric ,Brain Diseases ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Apnea ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Medizin ,Nuclear Proteins ,Neurodegenerative ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Brain Disorders ,Phenotype ,Hyperekplexia ,Seizures ,Clinical Research ,Muscle Hypertonia ,Infant Mortality ,Neurological ,Bradycardia ,Humans ,Cognitive Sciences ,Human medicine ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Background and ObjectivesBRAT1encephalopathy is an ultra-rare autosomal recessive neonatal encephalopathy. We delineate the neonatal electroclinical phenotype at presentation and provide insights for early diagnosis.MethodsThrough a multinational collaborative, we studied a cohort of neonates with encephalopathy associated with biallelic pathogenic variants inBRAT1for whom detailed clinical, neurophysiologic, and neuroimaging information was available from the onset of symptoms. Neuropathologic changes were also analyzed.ResultsWe included 19 neonates. Most neonates were born at term (16/19) from nonconsanguineous parents. 15/19 (79%) were admitted soon after birth to a neonatal intensive care unit, exhibiting multifocal myoclonus, both spontaneous and exacerbated by stimulation. 7/19 (37%) had arthrogryposis at birth, and all except 1 progressively developed hypertonia in the first week of life. Multifocal myoclonus, which was present in all but 1 infant, was the most prominent manifestation and did not show any EEG correlate in 16/19 (84%). Video-EEG at onset was unremarkable in 14/19 (74%) infants, and 6 (33%) had initially been misdiagnosed with hyperekplexia. Multifocal seizures were observed at a median age of 14 days (range: 1–29). During the first months of life, all infants developed progressive encephalopathy, acquired microcephaly, prolonged bouts of apnea, and bradycardia, leading to cardiac arrest and death at a median age of 3.5 months (range: 20 days to 30 months). Only 7 infants (37%) received a definite diagnosis before death, at a median age of 34 days (range: 25–126), and almost two-thirds (12/19, 63%) were diagnosed 8 days to 12 years postmortem (median: 6.5 years). Neuropathology examination, performed in 3 patients, revealed severely delayed myelination and diffuse astrogliosis, sparing the upper cortical layers.DiscussionBRAT1encephalopathy is a neonatal-onset, rapidly progressive neurologic disorder. Neonates are often misdiagnosed as having hyperekplexia, and many die undiagnosed. The key phenotypic features are multifocal myoclonus, an organized EEG, progressive, persistent, and diffuse hypertonia, and an evolution into refractory multifocal seizures, prolonged bouts of apnea, bradycardia, and early death. Early recognition ofBRAT1encephalopathy allows for prompt workup, appropriate management, and genetic counseling.
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- 2023
48. Novel biallelic variants expand the phenotype of NAA20-related syndrome
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Gianluca D'Onofrio, Claudia Cuccurullo, Silje Kathrine Larsen, Mariasavina Severino, Alessandra D'Amico, Kirsten Brønstad, Mohammed AlOwain, Jennifer L. Morrison, Patricia G. Wheeler, Bryn D. Webb, Abdullah Alfalah, Michele Iacomino, Paolo Uva, Antonietta Coppola, Giuseppe Merla, Vincenzo Damiano Salpietro, Federico Zara, Pasquale Striano, Andrea Accogli, Thomas Arnesen, Leonilda Bilo, D'Onofrio, Gianluca, Cuccurullo, Claudia, Larsen, Silje Kathrine, Severino, Mariasavina, D'Amico, Alessandra, Brønstad, Kirsten, Alowain, Mohammed, Morrison, Jennifer L, Wheeler, Patricia G, Webb, Bryn D, Alfalah, Abdullah, Iacomino, Michele, Uva, Paolo, Coppola, Antonietta, Merla, Giuseppe, Salpietro, Vincenzo Damiano, Zara, Federico, Striano, Pasquale, Accogli, Andrea, Arnesen, Thoma, and Bilo, Leonilda
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acetyltransferase ,N-terminal acetylation ,NAA20 ,Genetics ,NatB ,neurodevelopmental disorder ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
NAA20 is the catalytic subunit of the NatB complex, which is responsible for N-terminal acetylation of approximately 20% of the human proteome. Recently, pathogenic biallelic variants in NAA20 were associated with a novel neurodevelopmental disorder in five individuals with limited clinical information. We report two sisters harboring compound heterozygous variant (c.100C>T (p.Gln34Ter) and c.11T>C p.(Leu4Pro)) in the NAA20 gene, identified by exome sequencing. In vitro studies showed that the missense variant p.Leu4Pro resulted in a reduction of NAA20 catalytic activity due to weak coupling with the NatB auxiliary subunit. In addition, unpublished data of the previous families were reported, outlining the core phenotype of the NAA20-related disorder mostly characterized by cognitive impairment, microcephaly, ataxia, brain malformations, dysmorphism and variable occurrence of cardiac defect and epilepsy. Remarkably, our two patients featured epilepsy onset in adolescence suggesting this may be a part of syndrome evolution. Functional studies are needed to better understand the complexity of NAA20 variants pathogenesis as well as of other genes linked to N-terminal acetylation.
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- 2023
49. Biallelic PRMT7 pathogenic variants are associated with a recognizable syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder with short stature, obesity, and craniofacial and digital abnormalities
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Elisa Cali, Mohnish Suri, Marcello Scala, Matteo P. Ferla, Shahryar Alavi, Eissa Ali Faqeih, Emilia K. Bijlsma, Kristen M. Wigby, Diana Baralle, Mohammad Y.V. Mehrjardi, Jennifer Schwab, Konrad Platzer, Katharina Steindl, Mais Hashem, Marilyn Jones, Dmitriy M. Niyazov, Jennifer Jacober, Rebecca Okashah Littlejohn, Denisa Weis, Neda Zadeh, Lance Rodan, Alice Goldenberg, François Lecoquierre, Marina Dutra-Clarke, Gabriella Horvath, Dana Young, Naama Orenstein, Shahad Bawazeer, Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout, Yvan Herenger, Mohammadreza Dehghani, Seyed Mohammad Seyedhassani, Amir Bahreini, Mahya E. Nasab, A. Gulhan Ercan-Sencicek, Zahra Firoozfar, Mojtaba Movahedinia, Stephanie Efthymiou, Pasquale Striano, Ehsan Ghayoor Karimiani, Vincenzo Salpietro, Jenny C. Taylor, Melody Redman, Alexander P.A. Stegmann, Andreas Laner, Ghada Abdel-Salam, Megan Li, Mario Bengala, Amelie Johanna Müller, Maria C. Digilio, Anita Rauch, Murat Gunel, Hannah Titheradge, Daniela N. Schweitzer, Alison Kraus, Irene Valenzuela, Scott D. McLean, Chanika Phornphutkul, Mustafa Salih, Amber Begtrup, Rhonda E. Schnur, Erin Torti, Tobias B. Haack, Carlos E. Prada, Fowzan S. Alkuraya, Henry Houlden, Reza Maroofian, MUMC+: DA KG Lab Specialisten (9), RS: FHML non-thematic output, Institut Català de la Salut, [Cali E] Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom. [Suri M] Nottingham Clinical Genetics Service, Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, City Hospital Campus, Nottingham, United Kingdom. [Scala M] Department of Neurosciences, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health (DINOGMI), University of Genoa, Genoa, Italy. Pediatric Neurology and Muscular Diseases Unit, IRCCS Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy. [Ferla MP] Genomic Medicine theme, Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, NIHR, Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. Wellcome Centre for Human Genetics, Oxford University, Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom. [Alavi S] Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, United Kingdom. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Faculty of Biological Science and Technology, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran. Palindrome, Isfahan, Iran. [Faqeih EA] Section of Medical Genetics, Children’s Specialist Hospital, King Fahad Medical, City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. [Valenzuela I] Àrea de Genètica Clínica i Molecular, Vall d'Hebron Hospital Universitari, Barcelona, Spain. Grup de Recerca de Medicina Genètica, Vall d’Hebron Institut de Recerca (VHIR), Barcelona, Spain, and Vall d'Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus
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Neurobiologia del desenvolupament ,Discapacitat intel·lectual - Aspectes genètics ,Neurodevelopmental disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 7] ,Otros calificadores::Otros calificadores::/genética [Otros calificadores] ,enfermedades y anomalías neonatales congénitas y hereditarias::enfermedades genéticas congénitas::enanismo [ENFERMEDADES] ,trastornos mentales::trastornos del desarrollo neurológico [PSIQUIATRÍA Y PSICOLOGÍA] ,Nanisme ,Nervous System Diseases::Neurologic Manifestations::Neurobehavioral Manifestations::Intellectual Disability [DISEASES] ,All institutes and research themes of the Radboud University Medical Center ,Other subheadings::Other subheadings::/genetics [Other subheadings] ,Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities::Genetic Diseases, Inborn::Dwarfism [DISEASES] ,enfermedades del sistema nervioso::manifestaciones neurológicas::manifestaciones neuroconductuales::discapacidad intelectual [ENFERMEDADES] ,Genetics (clinical) ,Mental Disorders::Neurodevelopmental Disorders [PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHOLOGY] - Abstract
Chromatinopathy; Syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder; Syndromic obesity Cromatinopatia; Trastorn sindròmic del neurodesenvolupament; Obesitat sindròmica Cromatinopatía; Trastorno sindrómico del neurodesarrollo; Obesidad sindrómica Purpose Protein arginine methyltransferase 7 (PRMT7) is a member of a family of enzymes that catalyzes the methylation of arginine residues on several protein substrates. Biallelic pathogenic PRMT7 variants have previously been associated with a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by short stature, brachydactyly, intellectual developmental disability, and seizures. To our knowledge, no comprehensive study describes the detailed clinical characteristics of this syndrome. Thus, we aim to delineate the phenotypic spectrum of PRMT7-related disorder. Methods We assembled a cohort of 51 affected individuals from 39 different families, gathering clinical information from 36 newly described affected individuals and reviewing data of 15 individuals from the literature. Results The main clinical characteristics of the PRMT7-related syndrome are short stature, mild to severe developmental delay/intellectual disability, hypotonia, brachydactyly, and distinct facial morphology, including bifrontal narrowing, prominent supraorbital ridges, sparse eyebrows, short nose with full/broad nasal tip, thin upper lip, full and everted lower lip, and a prominent or squared-off jaw. Additional variable findings include seizures, obesity, nonspecific magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities, eye abnormalities (i.e., strabismus or nystagmus), and hearing loss. Conclusion This study further delineates and expands the molecular, phenotypic spectrum and natural history of PRMT7-related syndrome characterized by a neurodevelopmental disorder with skeletal, growth, and endocrine abnormalities. The authors thank all patients and families for participation in this study. Part of this research was possible thanks to the Deciphering Developmental Disorders study. The Deciphering Developmental Disorders study presents independent research commissioned by the Health Innovation Challenge Fund (grant number HICF-1009-003). This study makes use of DECIPHER (http://www.deciphergenomics.org), which is funded by Wellcome. See www.ddduk.org/access.html for full acknowledgment. This study was also supported by the Wellcome Trust (WT093205MA and WT104033AIA to H.H. and 203141/Z/16/Z to M.P.F. and J.C.T.), Medical Research Council (H.H.), European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013, under grant agreement No. 2012-305121 to H.H.), the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), University College London Hospitals, Biomedical Research Centre, and Fidelity Foundation. The Yale Center for Mendelian Genomics (UM1HG006504) is funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute. D.B. is supported by NIHR Research Professorship (RP-2016-07-011). F.L. and A.G. received funding from European Union and Région Normandie in the context of Recherche Innovation Normandie 2018. Europe gets involved in Normandie with the European Regional Development Fund. The authors thank the families and KFMC Research Centre for the partial support (Intramural Research Fund; Demography of Recessive Diseases in KSA; Grant No. 019-052). This work was also supported by King Salman Center for Disability research through Research Group RG-2022-010.
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- 2023
50. 'On-demand' gene therapy for epilepsy
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Pasquale Striano and Fabio Benfenati
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Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2022
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