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Clinical and Neurophysiologic Phenotypes in Neonates with BRAT1 Encephalopathy

Authors :
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
Maria Roberta Cilio
Source :
Neurology, Neurology, vol 100, iss 12
Publication Year :
2023

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.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00283878
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology, Neurology, vol 100, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b4cd442a416c486ed53726277bcfbd7