4.5 Article

The clinico-pathological characterisation of focal cortical dysplasia type IIb genetically defined by MTOR mosaicism

Journal

NEUROPATHOLOGY AND APPLIED NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nan.12874

Keywords

brain; brain somatic variants; epilepsy; neuropathology; seizure

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This study used next generation sequencing to reveal frequent MTOR mutations in patients with FCD IIb and identified genotype-phenotype associations including non-temporal lobe lesion, larger lesion volume, and increased balloon cells and dysmorphic neurons.
AimsFocal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is a major cause of drug-resistant paediatric epilepsy and is amenable to successful neurosurgical resection. FCD ILAE Type IIb is the most common FCD subtype, and brain somatic mutations affecting the mTOR pathway play a major pathogenic role. The aim of this study was to comprehensively describe the genotype-phenotype association of 20 patients with histopathologically confirmed FCDIIb using next generation sequencing (NGS) of paired blood-brain samples. MethodsClinical and neuropathological data were retrospectively reviewed from the hospital archive. The NGS panel included 11 mTOR-pathway-related genes with maximum coverage of 2000x. The detected variants were validated by digital droplet PCR. ResultsPathogenic MTOR variants were identified in 10 patients (50%). Further comparison with MTOR-wildtype FCDIIb suggested a profound genotype-phenotype association characterised by (1) a non-temporal lobe lesion on MRI, (2) a larger lesion volume occupying grey and white matter (3.032 +/- 1.859 cm(3) vs 1.110 +/- 0.856 cm(3), p = 0.014), (3) more balloon cells (50.20 +/- 14.40 BC/mm(2) vs 31.64 +/- 30.56 BC/mm(2), p = 0.099) and dysmorphic neurons (48.72 +/- 19.47DN/mm(2) vs 15.28 +/- 13.95DN/mm(2), p = 0.000) and (4) a positive correlation between VAF and the lesion volume (r = 0.802, p = 0.017). ConclusionsOur study identified frequent MTOR mutations in the cell-rich FCDIIb phenotype, clinically characterised by a non-temporal location and large lesion volume. Comprehensive genotype-phenotype associations will help us further explore and define the broad spectrum of FCD lesions to make more targeted therapies available in the realm of epileptology.

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