Di Meglio Chloé, Lesca Gaetan, Villeneuve Nathalie, Lacoste Caroline, Abidi Affef, Cacciagli Pierre, Altuzarra Cécilia, Roubertie Agathe, Afenjar Alexandra, Renaldo-Robin Florence, Isidor Bertrand, Gautier Agnes, Husson Marie, Cances Claude, Metreau Julia, Laroche Cécile, Chouchane Mondher, Ville Dorothée, Marignier Stéphanie, Rougeot Christelle, Lebrun Marine, de Saint Martin Anne, Perez Alexandra, Riquet Audrey, Badens Catherine, Missirian Chantal, Philip Nicole, Chabrol Brigitte, Villard Laurent, Milh Mathieu
Pediatric Neurology Department, Timone Children Hospital, Marseille, France.
INSERM, U1028, CNRS, UMR5292, Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Lyon, France.
Epilepsia. 2015 Dec;56(12):1931-40. doi: 10.1111/epi.13214. Epub 2015 Oct 29.
Mutations in the syntaxin binding protein 1 gene (STXBP1) have been associated mostly with early onset epileptic encephalopathies (EOEEs) and Ohtahara syndrome, with a mutation detection rate of approximately 10%, depending on the criteria of selection of patients. The aim of this study was to retrospectively describe clinical and electroencephalography (EEG) features associated with STXBP1-related epilepsies to orient molecular screening.
We screened STXBP1 in a cohort of 284 patients with epilepsy associated with a developmental delay/intellectual disability and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) without any obvious structural abnormality. We reported on patients with a mutation and a microdeletion involving STXBP1 found using array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH).
We found a mutation of STXBP1 in 22 patients and included 2 additional patients with a deletion including STXBP1. In 22 of them, epilepsy onset was before 3 months of age. EEG at onset was abnormal in all patients, suppression-burst and multifocal abnormalities being the most common patterns. The rate of patients carrying a mutation ranged from 25% in Ohtahara syndrome to <5% in patients with an epilepsy beginning after 3 months of age. Epilepsy improved over time for most patients, with an evolution to West syndrome in half. Patients had moderate to severe developmental delay with normal head growth. Cerebellar syndrome with ataxic gait and/or tremor was present in 60%.
Our data confirm that STXBP1 mutations are associated with neonatal-infantile epileptic encephalopathies. The initial key features highlighted in the cohort of early epileptic patients are motor seizures either focal or generalized, abnormal initial interictal EEG, and normal head growth. In addition, we constantly found an ongoing moderate to severe developmental delay with normal head growth. Patients often had ongoing ataxic gait with trembling gestures. Altogether these features should help the clinician to consider STXBP1 molecular screening.
syntaxin结合蛋白1基因(STXBP1)突变主要与早发性癫痫性脑病(EOEEs)和大田原综合征相关,根据患者选择标准,突变检出率约为10%。本研究的目的是回顾性描述与STXBP1相关癫痫相关的临床和脑电图(EEG)特征,以指导分子筛查。
我们在284例伴有发育迟缓/智力残疾且脑磁共振成像(MRI)无明显结构异常的癫痫患者队列中筛查了STXBP1。我们报告了使用阵列比较基因组杂交(CGH)发现的携带STXBP1突变和微缺失的患者。
我们在22例患者中发现了STXBP1突变,并纳入了另外2例包含STXBP1缺失的患者。其中22例癫痫发作发生在3个月龄之前。所有患者发作时的脑电图均异常,抑制爆发和多灶性异常是最常见的模式。携带突变的患者比例从大田原综合征的25%到3个月龄后开始癫痫发作的患者中的<5%不等。大多数患者的癫痫随时间改善,其中一半演变为韦斯特综合征。患者有中度至重度发育迟缓,但头围正常。60%的患者出现伴有共济失调步态和/或震颤的小脑综合征。
我们的数据证实STXBP1突变与新生儿-婴儿癫痫性脑病相关。早期癫痫患者队列中突出的初始关键特征是局灶性或全身性运动性发作、发作间期脑电图异常以及头围正常。此外,我们持续发现患者存在中度至重度发育迟缓,但头围正常。患者经常伴有共济失调步态和颤抖姿势。总之,这些特征应有助于临床医生考虑进行STXBP1分子筛查。