| Literature DB >> 34208656 |
Chiara Pepi1, Luca de Palma1, Marina Trivisano1, Nicola Pietrafusa1, Francesca Romana Lepri2, Andrea Diociaiuti3, Francesca Diomedi Camassei4, Giusy Carfi-Pavia1, Alessandro De Benedictis5, Camilla Rossi-Espagnet6,7, Federico Vigevano8, Carlo Efisio Marras5, Antonio Novelli2, Ingmar Bluemcke9, Nicola Specchio1.
Abstract
The rare nevus sebaceous (NS) syndrome (NSS) includes cortical malformations and drug-resistant epilepsy. Somatic RAS-pathway genetic variants are pathogenetic in NS, but not yet described within the brain of patients with NSS. We report on a 5-year-old boy with mild psychomotor delay. A brown-yellow linear skin lesion suggestive of NS in the left temporo-occipital area was evident at birth. Epileptic spasms presented at aged six months. EEG showed continuous left temporo-occipital epileptiform abnormalities. Brain MRI revealed a similarly located diffuse cortical malformation with temporal pole volume reduction and a small hippocampus. We performed a left temporo-occipital resection with histopathological diagnosis of focal cortical dysplasia type Ia in the occipital region and hippocampal sclerosis type 1. Three years after surgery, he is seizure-and drug-free (Engel class Ia) and showed cognitive improvement. Genetic examination of brain and skin specimens revealed the c.35G > T (p.Gly12Val) KRAS somatic missense mutation. Literature review suggests epilepsy surgery in patients with NSS is highly efficacious, with 73% probability of seizure freedom. The few histological analyses reported evidenced disorganized cortex, occasionally with cytomegalic neurons. This is the first reported association of a KRAS genetic variant with cortical malformations associated with epilepsy, and suggests a possible genetic substrate for hippocampal sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: KRAS genetic variants; RAS pathway; focal cortical dysplasia; hippocampal sclerosis; nevus sebaceous syndrome; pediatric epilepsy surgery
Year: 2021 PMID: 34208656 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11060793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425