| Literature DB >> 32547374 |
Joni N Saby1, Sarika U Peters2, Timothy P L Roberts1,3, Charles A Nelson4, Eric D Marsh5,6.
Abstract
Rett syndrome is a debilitating neurodevelopmental disorder for which no disease-modifying treatment is available. Fortunately, advances in our understanding of the genetics and pathophysiology of Rett syndrome has led to the development of promising new therapeutics for the condition. Several of these therapeutics are currently being tested in clinical trials with others likely to progress to clinical trials in the coming years. The failure of recent clinical trials for Rett syndrome and other neurodevelopmental disorders has highlighted the need for electrophysiological or other objective biological markers of treatment response to support the success of clinical trials moving forward. The purpose of this review is to describe the existing studies of electroencephalography (EEG) and evoked potentials (EPs) in Rett syndrome and discuss the open questions that must be addressed before the field can adopt these measures as surrogate endpoints in clinical trials. In addition to summarizing the human work on Rett syndrome, we also describe relevant studies with animal models and the limited research that has been carried out on Rett-related disorders, particularly methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) duplication syndrome, CDKL5 deficiency disorder, and FOXG1 disorder.Entities:
Keywords: EEG; Rett syndrome; biomarker; developmental encephalopathy; evoked potential
Year: 2020 PMID: 32547374 PMCID: PMC7271894 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2020.00030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Summary of evoked potential (EP) and quantitative electroencephalography (EEG) studies of Rett syndrome and related developmental encephalopathies (DEs).
| Study | Age Range | Stimuli | Main Findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auditory | ||||
| Stach et al. ( | 36 | 2–28 years | Clicks, Tones | Normal ABR in all; Abnormal middle and late AEPs in an increasing percentage of patients |
| Foxe et al. ( | 14 | 3–21 years | Tones (oddball) | AEP is abnormal; MMN is present but abnormal |
| Peters et al. ( | Rett: 5 MDD: 12 | 3–11 years | Familiar and unfamiliar voices | Greater gamma for familiar voice in MDD; Greater gamma for unfamiliar voice in Rett |
| Peters et al. ( | Rett: 9 MDD: 7 | 4–12 years | Familiar and unfamiliar names | Larger ERPs to own name in MDD; Larger ERPs to another name in Rett |
| Key et al. ( | 11 | 4–12 years | Words and non-words | More negative ERP amplitude to words than non-words at right temporal sites (compared to left temporal sites in TD) |
| Saunders et al. ( | 11 | 4–24 years | Grating stimuli; Reversing checkerboard | Normal visual thresholds; Decreased VEP amplitude and varying latencies |
| LeBlanc et al. ( | 34 | 22 months–8 years | Reversing checkboard | Decreased VEP amplitude; Reduced visual-spatial acuity |
| Boggio et al. ( | FOXG1: 3 | 17 months–22 years | Light flashes | VEPs in the normal range |
| Yoshikawa et al. ( | 10 | 3–19 years | Median nerve stimulation | SEPs abnormal in 7; Giant SEPs in 5 |
| Guerrini et al. ( | 10 | 3–20 years | Median nerve stimulation | SEPs delayed and enlarged |
| Verma et al. ( | 9 | 2–15 years | Light flashes; Clicks; Median nerve stimulation | Normal evoked potentials in all participants |
| Bader et al. ( | 6 | 10–22 years | Clicks; Median nerve stimulation | Abnormal SEPs in all participants; Abnormal ABR in all but one |
| Bader et al. ( | 9 | 10–22 years | Light flashes; Clicks | Slow and distorted VEPs; Early AEP components intact, later components delayed but variable |
| Kálmánchey ( | 5 | 18 months–4 years | Light flashes; Clicks; Median nerve stimulation | Normally evoked potentials in all participants |
| Yamanouchi et al., | 9 | 2–19 years | Light flashes; Median nerve stimulation | Mechanisms of giant VEPs and SEPs in Rett differ from those of giant EPs in photosensitive progressive myoclonus epilepsy |
| Stauder et al. ( | 17 | 2–60 years | Visual patterns; Tones (both oddball) | Prolonged and attenuated ERPs; A decline in ERP amplitude with increasing age |
| Khwaja et al. ( | 10 | 2–10 years | n/a | Decreased right frontal alpha asymmetry between pre- and post-treatment with IGF-1 |
| Ammanuel et al. ( | 10 | 2–9 years | n/a | Abnormal delta power during slow-wave sleep |
| Fabio et al. ( | 34 | 5–36 years | n/a | Changes in beta and theta power following cognitive intervention |
| Keogh et al. ( | 42 | 1–23 years | n/a | Differential patterns of interelectrode coherence in individuals with MECP2 vs. CDKL5 mutations |
| Roche et al., | 57 | 23 months–10 years | n/a | Increased power in lower frequency bands, decreased power in middle-frequency bands |
n—number of participants in the clinical group (Rett syndrome unless otherwise noted), MDD—MECP2 duplication disorder.
Figure 1Example of visual and auditory evoked potential (AEP) waveforms and head locations. Sample (unpublished) auditory and visual evoked potentials (AEPs/VEPs) from a 16-year-old individual with Rett syndrome (dotted line) and an age-matched typically developing (TD) control (solid line) The primary positive (P) and negative (N) components are indicated. The schematic on the left shows the location of the electrodes used for the auditory (Cz) and visual (Oz) responses. The auditory response was elicited using a 500 Hz tone. The visual response was elicited using a reversing checkerboard. Negativity is plotted up.