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Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy

BACKGROUND: Dravet syndrome (DS) is currently considered as an epileptic encephalopathy, a condition in which epilepsy causes deterioration or developmental delay but preliminary data suggested that cognitive course may worsen independently from epilepsy. Our objective was to prospectively analyze t...

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Autores principales: Nabbout, Rima, Chemaly, Nicole, Chipaux, Mathilde, Barcia, Giulia, Bouis, Charles, Dubouch, Celia, Leunen, Dorothee, Jambaqué, Isabelle, Dulac, Olivier, Dellatolas, Georges, Chiron, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24225340
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1750-1172-8-176
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author Nabbout, Rima
Chemaly, Nicole
Chipaux, Mathilde
Barcia, Giulia
Bouis, Charles
Dubouch, Celia
Leunen, Dorothee
Jambaqué, Isabelle
Dulac, Olivier
Dellatolas, Georges
Chiron, Catherine
author_facet Nabbout, Rima
Chemaly, Nicole
Chipaux, Mathilde
Barcia, Giulia
Bouis, Charles
Dubouch, Celia
Leunen, Dorothee
Jambaqué, Isabelle
Dulac, Olivier
Dellatolas, Georges
Chiron, Catherine
author_sort Nabbout, Rima
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dravet syndrome (DS) is currently considered as an epileptic encephalopathy, a condition in which epilepsy causes deterioration or developmental delay but preliminary data suggested that cognitive course may worsen independently from epilepsy. Our objective was to prospectively analyze the neuropsychological features in a large cohort of DS patients and its relationships with epilepsy and SCN1A mutation. METHODS: 81 examinations were performed in 67 patients with typical DS (9m-24y, 15 longitudinally studied) using Brunet-Lezine (developmental/intelligence quotient [DQ/IQ] and DQ sub-scores), Achenbach, Conners, and a semi-quantitative psychomotor score (SQPS). We studied the correlation between DQ/IQ/SQPS and age, epilepsy characteristics, and whether patients presented SCN1A mutation. RESULTS: DQ/IQ significantly decreased with age (r = −.53, p < .001), from normal before 2y (mean 80, range 64–105) to low after 3y (mean 48, range 30–69), with hyperactivity and attention disorders hampering learning abilities especially up to 6y. However, raw (not age-adjusted) DQ sub-scores increased with age during the first decade, showing that there is no regression. We did not find any significant correlation between DQ/IQ at last evaluation and epilepsy data, i.e. first seizure (age, type, duration, fever), seizures during the course (type, fever sensitivity), status epilepticus (age of onset, number, fever), photosensitivity, and treatment, except for myoclonus and focal seizures which were associated with a lower QD/IQ after 3y. SCN1A mutated patients (n = 58) seemed to exhibit worse psychomotor course than non-mutated ones (n = 9) (severe SQPS in 26% vs 0%), although their epilepsy tended to be less severe (tonic seizures in 12% vs 44% [p = 0.04], first status epilepticus before 6 m in 26% vs 67% [p = .02], mean number of SE 2.5 vs 4.5 [p = .09]). DQ sub-scores were dissociated throughout the whole course: from onset hand-eye coordination was significantly lower than language, posture and sociability (p < .01). Dissociation seemed to be more frequent in mutated than in non-mutated patients (motor SQPS was normal for in 77% vs 44% [p = 0.017] whereas language SQPS was normal for 47% vs 100%). CONCLUSIONS: Although psychomotor/cognitive delay declines with age, there is no regression. In addition, encephalopathy is not a pure consequence of epilepsy but SCN1A mutation seems to play an additional, direct role.
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spelling pubmed-42257572014-11-11 Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy Nabbout, Rima Chemaly, Nicole Chipaux, Mathilde Barcia, Giulia Bouis, Charles Dubouch, Celia Leunen, Dorothee Jambaqué, Isabelle Dulac, Olivier Dellatolas, Georges Chiron, Catherine Orphanet J Rare Dis Research BACKGROUND: Dravet syndrome (DS) is currently considered as an epileptic encephalopathy, a condition in which epilepsy causes deterioration or developmental delay but preliminary data suggested that cognitive course may worsen independently from epilepsy. Our objective was to prospectively analyze the neuropsychological features in a large cohort of DS patients and its relationships with epilepsy and SCN1A mutation. METHODS: 81 examinations were performed in 67 patients with typical DS (9m-24y, 15 longitudinally studied) using Brunet-Lezine (developmental/intelligence quotient [DQ/IQ] and DQ sub-scores), Achenbach, Conners, and a semi-quantitative psychomotor score (SQPS). We studied the correlation between DQ/IQ/SQPS and age, epilepsy characteristics, and whether patients presented SCN1A mutation. RESULTS: DQ/IQ significantly decreased with age (r = −.53, p < .001), from normal before 2y (mean 80, range 64–105) to low after 3y (mean 48, range 30–69), with hyperactivity and attention disorders hampering learning abilities especially up to 6y. However, raw (not age-adjusted) DQ sub-scores increased with age during the first decade, showing that there is no regression. We did not find any significant correlation between DQ/IQ at last evaluation and epilepsy data, i.e. first seizure (age, type, duration, fever), seizures during the course (type, fever sensitivity), status epilepticus (age of onset, number, fever), photosensitivity, and treatment, except for myoclonus and focal seizures which were associated with a lower QD/IQ after 3y. SCN1A mutated patients (n = 58) seemed to exhibit worse psychomotor course than non-mutated ones (n = 9) (severe SQPS in 26% vs 0%), although their epilepsy tended to be less severe (tonic seizures in 12% vs 44% [p = 0.04], first status epilepticus before 6 m in 26% vs 67% [p = .02], mean number of SE 2.5 vs 4.5 [p = .09]). DQ sub-scores were dissociated throughout the whole course: from onset hand-eye coordination was significantly lower than language, posture and sociability (p < .01). Dissociation seemed to be more frequent in mutated than in non-mutated patients (motor SQPS was normal for in 77% vs 44% [p = 0.017] whereas language SQPS was normal for 47% vs 100%). CONCLUSIONS: Although psychomotor/cognitive delay declines with age, there is no regression. In addition, encephalopathy is not a pure consequence of epilepsy but SCN1A mutation seems to play an additional, direct role. BioMed Central 2013-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4225757/ /pubmed/24225340 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1750-1172-8-176 Text en Copyright © 2013 Nabbout et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Nabbout, Rima
Chemaly, Nicole
Chipaux, Mathilde
Barcia, Giulia
Bouis, Charles
Dubouch, Celia
Leunen, Dorothee
Jambaqué, Isabelle
Dulac, Olivier
Dellatolas, Georges
Chiron, Catherine
Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title_full Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title_fullStr Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title_full_unstemmed Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title_short Encephalopathy in children with Dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
title_sort encephalopathy in children with dravet syndrome is not a pure consequence of epilepsy
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4225757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24225340
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1750-1172-8-176
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