Systematic Review of the Genetics of Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy: Potential Overlap With Sudden Cardiac Death and Arrhythmia‐Related Genes

Author:

Chahal C. Anwar A.123,Salloum Mohammad N.4,Alahdab Fares56,Gottwald Joseph A.1,Tester David J.137,Anwer Lucman A.189,So Elson L.5,Murad Mohammad Hassan56,St Louis Erik K.11011,Ackerman Michael J.123712,Somers Virend K.13

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

2. Mayo Clinic Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

3. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

4. Internal Medicine Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Queens Hospital Center New York NY

5. Evidence‐Based Practice Research Program Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

6. Division of Preventive, Occupational and Aerospace Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

7. Windland Smith Rice Sudden Death Genomics Laboratory Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

8. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

9. General Surgery UIC/MGH Chicago IL

10. Department of Neurology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

11. Mayo Center for Sleep Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

12. Department of Pediatrics Mayo Clinic Rochester MN

Abstract

Background Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy ( SUDEP ) is the leading cause of epilepsy‐related death. SUDEP shares many features with sudden cardiac death and sudden unexplained death in the young and may have a similar genetic contribution. We aim to systematically review the literature on the genetics of SUDEP . Methods and Results PubMed, MEDLINE Epub Ahead of Print, Ovid Medline In‐Process & Other Non‐Indexed Citations, MEDLINE , EMBASE , Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Scopus were searched through April 4, 2017. English language human studies analyzing SUDEP for known sudden death, ion channel and arrhythmia‐related pathogenic variants, novel variant discovery, and copy number variant analyses were included. Aggregate descriptive statistics were generated; data were insufficient for meta‐analysis. A total of 8 studies with 161 unique individuals were included; mean was age 29.0 (± SD 14.2) years; 61% males; ECG data were reported in 7.5% of cases; 50.7% were found prone and 58% of deaths were nocturnal. Cause included all types of epilepsy. Antemortem diagnosis of Dravet syndrome and autism (with duplication of chromosome 15) was associated with 11% and 9% of cases. The most frequently detected known pathogenic variants at postmortem were in Na + and K + ion channel subunits, as were novel potentially pathogenic variants (11%). Overall, the majority of variants were of unknown significance. Analysis of copy number variant was insignificant. Conclusions SUDEP case adjudication and evaluation remains limited largely because of crucial missing data such as ECG s. The most frequent pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants identified by molecular autopsy are in ion channel or arrhythmia‐related genes, with an ≈11% discovery rate. Comprehensive postmortem examination should include examination of the heart and brain by specialized pathologists and blood storage.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference88 articles.

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