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KCNQ2encephalopathy

Authors :
Paul M. Levisohn
Tammy Tsuchida
John Millichap
Brenda E. Porter
Eric D. Marsh
Lionel Carmant
Srishti Nangia
Emily L. McGinnis
Molly Tracy
Sarah Weckhuysen
Marc C. Patterson
Robert Flamini
Baouyen Tran
Keri Ramsey
Bruria Ben-Zeev
Charu Venkatesan
Vinodh Narayanan
Kristen Park
Nishtha Joshi
Edward C. Cooper
Xilma R. Ortiz-Gonzalez
Maurizio Taglialatela
Phillip L. Pearl
Millichap, John J
Park, Kristen L
Tsuchida, Tammy
Ben Zeev, Bruria
Carmant, Lionel
Flamini, Robert
Joshi, Nishtha
Levisohn, Paul M
Marsh, Eric
Nangia, Srishti
Narayanan, Vinodh
Ortiz Gonzalez, Xilma R
Patterson, Marc C
Pearl, Phillip L
Porter, Brenda
Ramsey, Keri
Mcginnis, Emily L
Taglialatela, Maurizio
Tracy, Molly
Tran, Baouyen
Venkatesan, Charu
Weckhuysen, Sarah
Cooper, Edward C.
Source :
Neurology : Genetics, Neurology: Genetics
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2016.

Abstract

Objective: To advance the understanding of KCNQ2 encephalopathy genotype–phenotype relationships and to begin to assess the potential of selective KCNQ channel openers as targeted treatments. Methods: We retrospectively studied 23 patients with KCNQ2 encephalopathy, including 11 treated with ezogabine (EZO). We analyzed the genotype–phenotype relationships in these and 70 previously described patients. Results: The mean seizure onset age was 1.8 ± 1.6 (SD) days. Of the 20 EEGs obtained within a week of birth, 11 showed burst suppression. When new seizure types appeared in infancy (15 patients), the most common were epileptic spasms (n = 8). At last follow-up, seizures persisted in 9 patients. Development was delayed in all, severely in 14. The KCNQ2 variants identified introduced amino acid missense changes or, in one instance, a single residue deletion. They were clustered in 4 protein subdomains predicted to poison tetrameric channel functions. EZO use (assessed by the treating physicians and parents) was associated with improvement in seizures and/or development in 3 of the 4 treated before 6 months of age, and 2 of the 7 treated later; no serious side effects were observed. Conclusions: KCNQ2 variants cause neonatal-onset epileptic encephalopathy of widely varying severity. Pathogenic variants in epileptic encephalopathy are clustered in “hot spots” known to be critical for channel activity. For variants causing KCNQ2 channel loss of function, EZO appeared well tolerated and potentially beneficial against refractory seizures when started early. Larger, prospective studies are needed to enable better definition of prognostic categories and more robust testing of novel interventions. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class IV evidence that EZO is effective for refractory seizures in patients with epilepsy due to KCNQ2 encephalopathy.

Details

ISSN :
23767839
Volume :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0e4f3c9b26d60faa16bbc29046a38f51
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/nxg.0000000000000096