Abstract

Benign familial infantile seizure (BFIS) is an autosomal dominant infantile-onset epilepsy syndrome with a typically benign prognosis. It is commonly associated with heterozygous mutations of the PRRT2 gene located on chromosome 16p11.2. The frameshift heterozygous mutation (c.649dupC, p.Arg217Profs∗8) in PRRT2 is responsible for the majority of BFIS cases. In this report, we present a rare case of a girl with a confirmed clinical and genetic diagnosis of BFIS due to a frameshift heterozygous mutation in PRRT2 (c.649dupC). She exhibited typical neurodevelopment until 15 months of age, followed by an unexpected severe autistic regression. In addition to BFIS, PRRT2 mutations are also associated with paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD) and infantile convulsions and paroxysmal choreoathetosis (ICCA), indicating a complex genotype-phenotype heterogeneity in PRRT2 mutations. This clinical observation highlights the possibility that BFIS patients with PRRT2 mutations may not always have a benign neurodevelopmental prognosis, emphasizing the need for long-term clinical follow-up.

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