Abstract

BackgroundEpilepsy is a group of neurological disorders characterized by recurrent epileptic seizures. Epilepsy is affected by many factors, approximately 20–30% of cases are caused by acquired conditions, but in the remaining cases, genetic factors play an important role. Early establishment of a specific diagnosis is important to treat and manage this disease.MethodsIn this study, we have recruited 43 epileptic encephalopathy patients and the molecular genetic analysis of those children was performed by whole-exome sequencing (WES).ResultsFourteen patients (32.6%, 14/43) had positive genetic diagnoses, including fifteen mutations in fourteen genes. The overall diagnostic yield was 32.6%. A total of 9 patients were diagnosed as pathogenic mutations, including 4 variants had been reported as pathogenic previously and 6 novel variants that had not been reported previously. Therefore, WES heralds promise as a tool for clinical diagnosis of patients with genetic disease.ConclusionEarly establishment of a specific diagnosis, on the one hand, is necessary for providing an accurate prognosis and recurrence risk as well as optimizing management and treatment options. On the other hand, to unveil the genetic architecture of epilepsy, it is of vital importance to investigate the phenotypic and genetic complexity of epilepsy.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is a group of neurological disorders characterized by recurrent epileptic seizures

  • Epilepsy is affected by many factors [7], approximately 20–30% of cases are caused by acquired conditions such as head trauma and stroke, but in the remaining cases, genetic factors play an important role [8]

  • whole-exome sequencing (WES) heralds promise as a tool for clinical diagnosis of patients with genetic disease

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Summary

Introduction

Epilepsy is a group of neurological disorders characterized by recurrent epileptic seizures. Epilepsy is affected by many factors [7], approximately 20–30% of cases are caused by acquired conditions such as head trauma and stroke, but in the remaining cases, genetic factors play an important role [8]. Mutations in reported genes are pathogenic, but the variants have not been reported previously, and it has not been listed in HGMD or ClinVar. on the one hand, to give an early diagnosis for patients is necessary for providing an accurate prognosis and recurrence risk as well as optimizing management and treatment options. Epilepsy is affected by many factors, approximately 20–30% of cases are caused by acquired conditions, but in the remaining cases, genetic factors play an important role. Establishment of a specific diagnosis is important to treat and manage this disease

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