1. Global modified Delphi consensus on diagnosis, phenotypes, and treatment of SCN8A‐related epilepsy and/or neurodevelopmental disorders.
- Author
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Conecker, Gabrielle, Xia, Maya Y., Hecker, JayEtta, Achkar, Christelle, Cukiert, Cristine, Devries, Seth, Donner, Elizabeth, Fitzgerald, Mark P., Gardella, Elena, Hammer, Michael, Hegde, Anaita, Hu, Chunhui, Kato, Mitsuhiro, Luo, Tian, Schreiber, John M., Wang, Yi, Kooistra, Tammy, Oudin, Madeleine, Waldrop, Kayla, and Youngquist, J. Tyler
- Subjects
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SODIUM channel blockers , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DELPHI method , *LITERATURE reviews , *DEVELOPMENTAL delay , *EPILEPSY - Abstract
Objective: We aimed to develop consensus for diagnosis/management of SCN8A‐related disorders. Utilizing a modified Delphi process, a global cohort of experienced clinicians and caregivers provided input on diagnosis, phenotypes, treatment, and management of SCN8A‐related disorders. Methods: A Core Panel (13 clinicians, one researcher, six caregivers), divided into three subgroups (diagnosis/phenotypes, treatment, comorbidities/prognosis), performed a literature review and developed questions for the modified Delphi process. Twenty‐eight expert clinicians, one researcher, and 13 caregivers from 16 countries participated in the subsequent three survey rounds. We defined consensus as follows: strong consensus, ≥80% fully agree; moderate consensus, ≥80% fully/partially agree, <10% disagree; and modest consensus, 67%–79% fully/partially agree, <10% disagree. Results: Early diagnosis is important for long‐term clinical outcomes in SCN8A‐related disorders. There are five phenotypes: three with early seizure onset (severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy [DEE], mild/moderate DEE, self‐limited (familial) infantile epilepsy [SeL(F)IE]) and two with later/no seizure onset (neurodevelopmental delay with generalized epilepsy [NDDwGE], NDD without epilepsy [NDDwoE]). Caregivers represented six patients with severe DEE, five mild/moderate DEE, one NDDwGE, and one NDDwoE. Phenotypes vary by age at seizures/developmental delay onset, seizure type, electroencephalographic/magnetic resonance imaging findings, and first‐line treatment. Gain of function (GOF) versus loss of function (LOF) is valuable for informing treatment. Sodium channel blockers are optimal first‐line treatment for GOF, severe DEE, mild/moderate DEE, and SeL(F)IE; levetiracetam is relatively contraindicated in GOF patients. First‐line treatment for NDDwGE is valproate, ethosuximide, or lamotrigine; sodium channel blockers are relatively contraindicated in LOF patients. Significance: This is the first‐ever global consensus for the diagnosis and treatment of SCN8A‐related disorders. This consensus will reduce knowledge gaps in disease recognition and inform preferred treatment across this heterogeneous disorder. Consensus of this type allows more clinicians to provide evidence‐based care and empowers SCN8A families to advocate for their children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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