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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() EpilepsiaVolume 49 Issue 6, Pages 1027 - 1037 Published Online: 7 Feb 2008 © 2010 International League Against Epilepsy Published on behalf of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE)
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 609K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking The three stages of epilepsy in patients with CDKL5 mutations Copyright © 2008 by the International League Against Epilepsy KEYWORDS Epileptic encephalopathy • Atypical Rett syndrome •
CDKL5 mutations • Infantile spasms ABSTRACTMutations in the X-linked cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 (CDKL5) gene are responsible for a severe encephalopathy with early epilepsy. So far, the electroclinical phenotype remains largely unknown and no clear genotype–phenotype correlations have been established. Purpose: To characterize the epilepsy associated with CDKL5 mutations and to look for a relationship between the genotype and the course of epilepsy. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the electroclinical phenotypes of 12 patients aged from 2.5 to 19 years diagnosed with pathogenic CDKL5 mutations and one patient with a novel intronic sequence variation of uncertain pathogenicity and examined whether the severity of the epilepsy was linked to the type and location of mutations. Results: The epilepsy course reveals three successive stages: (Stage I) early epilepsy (onset 1–10 weeks) with normal interictal electroencephalogram (EEG) (10/13) despite frequent convulsive seizures; (Stage II) epileptic encephalopathy with infantile spasms (8/8) and hypsarrhythmia (8/8). At the age of evaluation, seven patients were seizure free and six had developed refractory epilepsy (stage III) with tonic seizures and myoclonia (5/6). Interestingly, the patients carrying a CDKL5 mutations causing a truncation of the catalytic domain tended to develop a more frequent refractory epilepsy than patients with mutations located downstream (4/6, 66.6% versus 1/6, 16%) although, these trends are not yet significant. Discussion: Our data contribute to a better definition of the epileptic phenotype in CDKL5 mutations, and might give some clues to a potential relationship between the phenotype and the genotype in these patients. Accepted December 13, 2007; Online Early publication February 7, 2008. |
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