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Epileptic Disorders

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Focal epilepsy due to de novo SCN1A mutation Volume 23, numéro 3, June 2021

Illustrations


  • Figure 1

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Tableaux

Auteurs
1 Service de Neurologie Pédiatrique, Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris, France
2 Université de Paris, INSERM U1141, F-75019, Paris, France
3 Service de biologie moléculaire, Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpétrière, Paris, France
4 Service des explorations fonctionnelles, Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris, France
* Correspondence: Stéphane Auvin Service de Neurologie Pédiatrique CHU Hôpital Robert Debré, 48, boulevard Sérurier, 75935 Paris Cedex 19, France

Objective. Our aim was to identify patients with SCN1A-related epilepsy with a phenotype of pure focal epilepsy.

Methods. We conducted a retrospective study and a systematic review in Pubmed to identify patients with focal epilepsy associated with SCN1A pathogenic variants.

Results. We found three patients among 1,191 in our rare epilepsy database in 2017. The literature search from January 2000 to September 2019 led to identification of four patients with limited data. Our three patients had a common phenotype with focal-onset seizures as the only seizure type. All patients showed normal psychomotor development in the first years of life, and no intellectual disability although they displayed some cognitive or behavioural problems. Fever or hyperthermia were triggers in all three patients. In addition, all had a history of brief recurrent febrile seizures in their first year, followed by a phenotype of pharmacoresistant focal epilepsy with normal brain imaging. Two of them were initially investigated for epilepsy surgery. Seizure precipitation by fever has also been reported in previously published patients.

Significance. Focal epilepsy associated with SCN1A gene mutation should be recognized in patients with suggestive features, in particular among surgical candidates.