Phenotypic analysis of 303 multiplex families with common epilepsies
2017
Gene identification in epilepsy has mainly been limited to large families segregating genes of major effect and de novo mutations in
epileptic encephalopathies. Many families that present with common non-acquired focal epilepsies and genetic generalized epilepsies
remain unexplained. We assembled a cohort of ‘genetically enriched’ common epilepsies by collecting and phenotyping families
containing multiple individuals with unprovoked seizures. We aimed to determine if specific clinical epilepsy features aggregate
within families, and whether this segregation of phenotypes may constitute distinct ‘familial syndromes’ that could inform genomic
analyses. Families with three or more individuals with unprovoked seizures were studied across multiple international centres.
Affected individuals were phenotyped and classified according to specific electroclinical syndromes. Families were categorized based
on syndromic groupings of affected family members, examined for pedigree structure and phenotypic patterns and, where possible,
assigned specific familial epilepsy syndromes. A total of 303 families were assembled and analysed, comprising 1120 affected
phenotyped individuals. Of the 303 families, 117 exclusively segregated generalized epilepsy, 62 focal epilepsy, and 22 were
classified as genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures plus. Over one-third (102 families) were observed to have mixed epilepsy
phenotypes: 78 had both generalized and focal epilepsy features within the same individual (n = 39), or within first or second
degree relatives (n = 39). Among the genetic generalized epilepsy families, absence epilepsies were found to cluster within families
independently of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, and significantly more females were affected than males. Of the 62 familial focal
epilepsy families, two previously undescribed familial focal syndrome patterns were evident: 15 families had posterior quadrant
epilepsies, including seven with occipito-temporal localization and seven with temporo-parietal foci, and four families displayed
familial focal epilepsy of childhood with multiple affected siblings that was suggestive of recessive inheritance. The findings suggest
(i) specific patterns of syndromic familial aggregation occur, including newly recognized forms of familial focal epilepsy;
(ii) although syndrome-specificity usually occurs in multiplex families, the one-third of families with features of both focal and
generalized epilepsy is suggestive of shared genetic determinants; and (iii) patterns of features observed across families including
pedigree structure, sex, and age of onset may hold clues for future gene identification. Such detailed phenotypic information will be
invaluable in the conditioning and interpretation of forthcoming sequencing data to understand the genetic architecture and interrelationships
of the common epilepsy syndromes.
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