Abstract

ObjectiveThis study aimed to obtain a comprehensive understanding of the genetic and phenotypic aspects of GABRG2-related epilepsy and its prognosis and to explore the potential prospects for personalized medicine.MethodsThrough a multicenter collaboration in China, we analyzed the genotype-phenotype correlation and antiseizure medication (ASM) of patients with GABRG2-related epilepsy. The three-dimensional protein structure of the GABRG2 variant was modeled to predict the effect of GABRG2 missense variants using PyMOL 2.3 software.ResultsIn 35 patients with GABRG2 variants, 22 variants were de novo, and 18 variants were novel. The seizure onset age was ranged from 2 days after birth to 34 months (median age: 9 months). The seizure onset age was less than 1 year old in 22 patients (22/35, 62.9%). Seizure types included focal seizures (68.6%), generalized tonic-clonic seizures (60%), myoclonic seizures (14.3%), and absence seizures (11.4%). Other clinical features included fever-sensitive seizures (91.4%), cluster seizures (57.1%), and developmental delay (45.7%). Neuroimaging was abnormal in 2 patients, including dysplasia of the frontotemporal cortex and delayed myelination of white matter. Twelve patients were diagnosed with febrile seizures plus, eleven with epilepsy and developmental delay, two with Dravet syndrome, two with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, two with focal epilepsy, two with febrile seizures, and four with unclassified epilepsy. The proportions of patients with missense variants in the extracellular region and the transmembrane region exhibiting developmental delay were 40% and 63.2%, respectively. The last follow-up age ranged from 11 months to 17 years. Seizures were controlled in 71.4% of patients, and 92% of their seizures were controlled by valproate and/or levetiracetam.ConclusionThe clinical features of GABRG2-related epilepsy included seizure onset, usually in infancy, and seizures were fever-sensitive. More than half of the patients had cluster seizures. Phenotypes of GABRG2-related epilepsy were ranged from mild febrile seizures to severe epileptic encephalopathies. Most patients with GABRG2 variants who experienced seizures had a good prognosis. Valproate and levetiracetam were effective treatments for most patients.

Highlights

  • Epilepsy is characterized by an enduring predisposition to generate epileptic seizures

  • Thirty-five patients with epilepsy and GABRG2 variants who attended the Pediatric Department of Peking University First Hospital from January 2008 to August 2021 were included in this study, including 22 males and 13 females

  • Clinical information about the age at seizure onset, seizure frequency, seizure types, developmental milestones, neurological status, family history, the results of accessory examinations including electroencephalogram (EEG) and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and treatment were collected in the clinic

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Summary

Introduction

Epilepsy is characterized by an enduring predisposition to generate epileptic seizures. GABRG2 (OMIM:137164) resides on chromosome 5q34 and is a member of the gamma-aminobutyric acid-A (GABAA) receptor gene family of heteromeric pentameric ligand-gated ion channels. The first variant in GABRG2 (p.R43Q) was reported to be related to genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures (GEFS+) in 2001 in an Australian family (Wallace et al, 2001). Baulac et al (2001) identified a GABRG2 heterozygous missense variant (K328M) in a 3generation French family with variable seizure phenotypes and most consistent with GEFS+. With the broad application of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in patients with epilepsy, pathogenic variants of GABRG2 related to developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 74 (DEE74, OMIM:618396) were reported. No detailed descriptions of the phenotypic spectrum of patients with epilepsy carrying GABRG2 variants are available. This study aimed to determine the phenotypic spectrum of epilepsy patients carrying GABRG2 variants and the prognosis of patients in a Chinese cohort from multicenter

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