Benign Infantile Seizures and Paroxysmal Dyskinesia Caused by an SCN8A Mutation

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Elena Gardella
  • Felicitas Becker
  • Rikke S. Moller
  • Julian Schubert
  • Johannes R. Lemke
  • Line H. G. Larsen
  • Michael Nothnagel
  • Holger Thiele
  • Janine Altmueller
  • Steffen Syrbe
  • Andreas Merkenschlager
  • Thomas Bast
  • Bernhard Steinhoff
  • Peter Nuernberg
  • Yuan Mang
  • Louise Bakke Moller
  • Pia Gellert
  • Sarah E. Heron
  • Leanne M. Dibbens
  • Sarah Weckhuysen
  • Hans Atli Dahl
  • Saskia Biskup
  • Helle Hjalgrim
  • Holger Lerche
  • Sandor Beniczky
  • Yvonne G. Weber
Objective: Benign familial infantile seizures (BFIS), paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD), and their combination-known as infantile convulsions and paroxysmal choreoathetosis (ICCA)-are related autosomal dominant diseases. PRRT2 (proline-rich transmembrane protein 2 gene) has been identified as the major gene in all 3 conditions, found to be mutated in 80 to 90% of familial and 30 to 35% of sporadic cases.

Methods: We searched for the genetic defect in PRRT2-negative, unrelated families with BFIS or ICCA using whole exome or targeted gene panel sequencing, and performed a detailed cliniconeurophysiological workup.

Results: In 3 families with a total of 16 affected members, we identified the same, cosegregating heterozygous missense mutation (c.4447G> A; p.E1483K) in SCN8A, encoding a voltage-gated sodium channel. A founder effect was excluded by linkage analysis. All individuals except 1 had normal cognitive and motor milestones, neuroimaging, and interictal neurological status. Fifteen affected members presented with afebrile focal or generalized tonic-clonic seizures during the first to second year of life; 5 of them experienced single unprovoked seizures later on. One patient had seizures only at school age. All patients stayed otherwise seizure-free, most without medication. Interictal electroencephalogram (EEG) was normal in all cases but 2. Five of 16 patients developed additional brief paroxysmal episodes in puberty, either dystonic/dyskinetic or "shivering" attacks, triggered by stretching, motor initiation, or emotional stimuli. In 1 case, we recorded typical PKD spells by video-EEG-polygraphy, documenting a cortical involvement.

Interpretation: Our study establishes SCN8A as a novel gene in which a recurrent mutation causes BFIS/ICCA, expanding the clinical-genetic spectrum of combined epileptic and dyskinetic syndromes.
Original languageEnglish
JournalAnnals of Neurology
Volume79
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)428-436
ISSN0364-5134
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2016

ID: 167479706