Assessing the landscape of STXBP1-related disorders in 534 individuals.
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Authors
Parthasarathy, Shridhar
Fitch, Eryn
Gan, Jing
Ganesan, Shiva
Ellis, Colin A
Galer, Peter
Cunningham, Kristin
O'Brien, Margaret
Cosico, Mahgenn
Baker, Kate
Darling, Alejandra
Veiga de Goes, Fernanda
El Achkar, Christelle M
Doering, Jan Henje
Furia, Francesca
García-Cazorla, Ángeles
Geertjens, Lisa
Klein, Courtney
Kolesnik-Taylor, Anna
Lammertse, Hanna
Lee, Jeehun
Mackie, Alexandra
Misra-Isrie, Mala
Sexton, Emma
Sheidley, Beth
Smith, Lacey
Sotero, Luiza
Stamberger, Hannah
Syrbe, Steffen
Thalwitzer, Kim Marie
van Berkel, Annemiek
van Haelst, Mieke
Yuskaitis, Christopher
Prosser, Ben
Son Rigby, Charlene
Demarest, Scott
Pierce, Samuel
Zhang, Yuehua
Møller, Rikke S
Bruining, Hilgo
Poduri, Annapurna
Zara, Federico
Striano, Pasquale
Publication Date
2022-06-03Journal Title
Brain
ISSN
0006-8950
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Volume
145
Issue
5
Pages
1668-1683
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Physical Medium
Print
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Xian, J., Parthasarathy, S., Ruggiero, S. M., Balagura, G., Fitch, E., Helbig, K., Gan, J., et al. (2022). Assessing the landscape of STXBP1-related disorders in 534 individuals.. Brain, 145 (5), 1668-1683. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab327
Abstract
Disease-causing variants in STXBP1 are among the most common genetic causes of neurodevelopmental disorders. However, the phenotypic spectrum in STXBP1-related disorders is wide and clear correlations between variant type and clinical features have not been observed so far. Here, we harmonized clinical data across 534 individuals with STXBP1-related disorders and analysed 19 973 derived phenotypic terms, including phenotypes of 253 individuals previously unreported in the scientific literature. The overall phenotypic landscape in STXBP1-related disorders is characterized by neurodevelopmental abnormalities in 95% and seizures in 89% of individuals, including focal-onset seizures as the most common seizure type (47%). More than 88% of individuals with STXBP1-related disorders have seizure onset in the first year of life, including neonatal seizure onset in 47%. Individuals with protein-truncating variants and deletions in STXBP1 (n = 261) were almost twice as likely to present with West syndrome and were more phenotypically similar than expected by chance. Five genetic hotspots with recurrent variants were identified in more than 10 individuals, including p.Arg406Cys/His (n = 40), p.Arg292Cys/His/Leu/Pro (n = 30), p.Arg551Cys/Gly/His/Leu (n = 24), p.Pro139Leu (n = 12), and p.Arg190Trp (n = 11). None of the recurrent variants were significantly associated with distinct electroclinical syndromes, single phenotypic features, or showed overall clinical similarity, indicating that the baseline variability in STXBP1-related disorders is too high for discrete phenotypic subgroups to emerge. We then reconstructed the seizure history in 62 individuals with STXBP1-related disorders in detail, retrospectively assigning seizure type and seizure frequency monthly across 4433 time intervals, and retrieved 251 anti-seizure medication prescriptions from the electronic medical records. We demonstrate a dynamic pattern of seizure control and complex interplay with response to specific medications particularly in the first year of life when seizures in STXBP1-related disorders are the most prominent. Adrenocorticotropic hormone and phenobarbital were more likely to initially reduce seizure frequency in infantile spasms and focal seizures compared to other treatment options, while the ketogenic diet was most effective in maintaining seizure freedom. In summary, we demonstrate how the multidimensional spectrum of phenotypic features in STXBP1-related disorders can be assessed using a computational phenotype framework to facilitate the development of future precision-medicine approaches.
Keywords
STXBP1, Human Phenotype Ontology, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, epilepsy, genetics, Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, Humans, Infant, Munc18 Proteins, Retrospective Studies, Seizures, Spasms, Infantile
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00005/16)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab327
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/338274
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