학술논문

Familial Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Clinical Spectrum and Genetic Evidence for a Polygenic Architecture.
Document Type
Article
Source
Annals of Neurology. Nov2023, Vol. 94 Issue 5, p825-835. 11p.
Subject
*TEMPORAL lobe epilepsy
*EPILEPSY
*HIPPOCAMPAL sclerosis
*PARTIAL epilepsy
*SEIZURES (Medicine)
*DISEASE risk factors
Language
ISSN
0364-5134
Abstract
Objective: Familial mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (FMTLE) is an important focal epilepsy syndrome; its molecular genetic basis is unknown. Clinical descriptions of FMTLE vary between a mild syndrome with prominent déjà vu to a more severe phenotype with febrile seizures and hippocampal sclerosis. We aimed to refine the phenotype of FMTLE by analyzing a large cohort of patients and asked whether common risk variants for focal epilepsy and/or febrile seizures, measured by polygenic risk scores (PRS), are enriched in individuals with FMTLE. Methods: We studied 134 families with ≥ 2 first or second‐degree relatives with temporal lobe epilepsy, with clear mesial ictal semiology required in at least one individual. PRS were calculated for 227 FMTLE cases, 124 unaffected relatives, and 16,077 population controls. Results: The age of patients with FMTLE onset ranged from 2.5 to 70 years (median = 18, interquartile range = 13–28 years). The most common focal seizure symptom was déjà vu (62% of cases), followed by epigastric rising sensation (34%), and fear or anxiety (22%). The clinical spectrum included rare cases with drug‐resistance and/or hippocampal sclerosis. FMTLE cases had a higher mean focal epilepsy PRS than population controls (odds ratio = 1.24, 95% confidence interval = 1.06, 1.46, p = 0.007); in contrast, no enrichment for the febrile seizure PRS was observed. Interpretation: FMTLE is a generally mild drug‐responsive syndrome with déjà vu being the commonest symptom. In contrast to dominant monogenic focal epilepsy syndromes, our molecular data support a polygenic basis for FMTLE. Furthermore, the PRS data suggest that sub‐genome‐wide significant focal epilepsy genome‐wide association study single nucleotide polymorphisms are important risk variants for FMTLE. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:825–835 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]