Exome‐based analysis of cardiac arrhythmia, respiratory control, and epilepsy genes in sudden unexpected death in epilepsy

Richard D. Bagnall(The University of Sydney), Douglas E. Crompton(The University of Melbourne), Slavé Petrovski(The University of Melbourne), Lien Lam(The University of Sydney), Carina Cutmore(The University of Sydney), Sarah Garry(The University of Melbourne), Lynette G. Sadleir(University of Otago), Leanne M. Dibbens(University of South Australia), Anita Cairns(Children's Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service), Sara Kivity(Schneider Children's Medical Center), Zaid Afawi(Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center), Brigid M. Regan(The University of Melbourne), Johan Duflou(The University of Sydney), Samuel F. Berkovic(The University of Melbourne), Ingrid E. Scheffer(Royal Children's Hospital), Christopher Semsarian(The University of Sydney)
Annals of Neurology
December 24, 2015
Cited by 280

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The leading cause of epilepsy-related premature mortality is sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). The cause of SUDEP remains unknown. To search for genetic risk factors in SUDEP cases, we performed an exome-based analysis of rare variants. METHODS: Demographic and clinical information of 61 SUDEP cases were collected. Exome sequencing and rare variant collapsing analysis with 2,936 control exomes were performed to test for genes enriched with damaging variants. Additionally, cardiac arrhythmia, respiratory control, and epilepsy genes were screened for variants with frequency of <0.1% and predicted to be pathogenic with multiple in silico tools. RESULTS: The 61 SUDEP cases were categorized as definite SUDEP (n = 54), probable SUDEP (n = 5), and definite SUDEP plus (n = 2). We identified de novo mutations, previously reported pathogenic mutations, or candidate pathogenic variants in 28 of 61 (46%) cases. Four SUDEP cases (7%) had mutations in common genes responsible for the cardiac arrhythmia disease, long QT syndrome (LQTS). Nine cases (15%) had candidate pathogenic variants in dominant cardiac arrhythmia genes. Fifteen cases (25%) had mutations or candidate pathogenic variants in dominant epilepsy genes. No gene reached genome-wide significance with rare variant collapsing analysis; however, DEPDC5 (p = 0.00015) and KCNH2 (p = 0.0037) were among the top 30 genes, genome-wide. INTERPRETATION: A sizeable proportion of SUDEP cases have clinically relevant mutations in cardiac arrhythmia and epilepsy genes. In cases with an LQTS gene mutation, SUDEP may occur as a result of a predictable and preventable cause. Understanding the genetic basis of SUDEP may inform cascade testing of at-risk family members.


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