Epilepsy surgery outcomes in patients with GATOR1 gene complex variants: Report of new cases and review of literature Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • AIM: To report seizure outcomes in children with GATOR1 gene complex disorders who underwent epilepsy surgery and perform a systematic literature search to study the available evidence. METHODS: The records of children with pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in GATOR1 gene complex who underwent epilepsy surgery were reviewed. Clinical, radiological, neurophysiological, and histological data were extracted/summarized. The systematic review included all case series/reports and observational studies reporting on children or adults with genetic (germline or somatic) variants in the GATOR1 complex genes (DEPDC5, NPRL2, NPRL3) with focal epilepsy with/without focal cortical dysplasia who underwent epilepsy surgery; seizure outcomes were analyzed. RESULTS: Eight children with pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in GATOR1 complex genes were included. All had drug-resistant epilepsy. Six children had significant neurodevelopmental delay. Epilepsy surgery was performed in all; clinical seizure freedom was noted in 4 children (50%). Systematic literature search identified 17 eligible articles; additional 30 cases with patient-level data were studied. Lesional MRI brain was seen in 80% cases. The pooled rate of seizure freedom following surgery was 60%; FCD IIa was the most encountered pathology. INTERPRETATION: Epilepsy surgery may be effective in some children with GATOR1 complex gene variants. Seizure outcomes may be compromised by extensive epileptogenic zones.

authors

  • Sahly, Ahmed N
  • Whitney, Robyn
  • Costain, Gregory
  • Chau, Vann
  • Otsubo, Hiroshi
  • Ochi, Ayako
  • Donner, Elizabeth J
  • Cunningham, Jessie
  • Jones, Kevin Charles
  • Widjaja, Elysa
  • Ibrahim, George M
  • Jain, Puneet

publication date

  • April 2023