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Title
Defining the phenotype of FHF1 developmental and epileptic encephalopathy.
Publication Date
2020-07-26
Author(s)
Trivisano, Marina
Ferretti, Alessandro
Bebin, Elizabeth
Huh, Linda
Lesca, Gaetan
Siekierska, Aleksandra
Takeguchi, Ryo
Carneiro, Maryline
De Palma, Luca
Guella, Ilaria
Haginoya, Kazuhiro
Shi, Ruo Ming
Kikuchi, Atsuo
Kobayashi, Tomoko
Jung, Julien
Lagae, Lieven
Milh, Mathieu
Mathieu, Marie L
Minassian, Berge A
Novelli, Antonio
Pietrafusa, Nicola
Takeshita, Eri
Tartaglia, Marco
Terracciano, Alessandra
Thompson, Michelle L
Cooper, Gregory M
Vigevano, Federico
Villard, Laurent
Villeneuve, Nathalie
Buyse, Gunnar M
Demos, Michelle
Scheffer, Ingrid E
Specchio, Nicola
Subject
FGF12
FHF1
developmental and epileptic encephalopathy
epilepsy
genetic
neonatal onset
Type of document
Journal Article
OrcId
0000-0002-9841-8581
0000-0002-8120-0287
0000-0002-6725-2814
0000-0002-2311-2174
0000-0001-7691-9492
0000-0002-7118-0139
0000-0001-7513-0051
0000-0001-6657-5008
DOI
10.1111/epi.16582
Abstract
Fibroblast growth-factor homologous factor (FHF1) gene variants have recently been associated with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). FHF1 encodes a cytosolic protein that modulates neuronal sodium channel gating. We aim to refine the electroclinical phenotypic spectrum of patients with pathogenic FHF1 variants. We retrospectively collected clinical, genetic, neurophysiologic, and neuroimaging data of 17 patients with FHF1-DEE. Sixteen patients had recurrent heterozygous FHF1 missense variants: 14 had the recurrent p.Arg114His variant and two had a novel likely pathogenic variant p.Gly112Ser. The p.Arg114His variant is associated with an earlier onset and more severe phenotype. One patient carried a chromosomal microduplication involving FHF1. Twelve patients carried a de novo variant, five (29.5%) inherited from parents with gonadic or somatic mosaicism. Seizure onset was between 1 day and 41 months; in 76.5% it was within 30 days. Tonic seizures were the most frequent seizure type. Twelve patients (70.6%) had drug-resistant epilepsy, 14 (82.3%) intellectual disability, and 11 (64.7%) behavioral disturbances. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed mild cerebral and/or cerebellar atrophy in nine patients (52.9%). Overall, our findings expand and refine the clinical, EEG, and imaging phenotype of patients with FHF1-DEE, which is characterized by early onset epilepsy with tonic seizures, associated with moderate to severe ID and psychiatric features.
Link
Citation
Epilepsia 2020; 61(7): e71-e78
Jornal Title
Epilepsia

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