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Effect of fenfluramine on seizures and comorbidities in SCN8A-developmental and epileptic encephalopathy: A case series.

Angel Aledo-SerranoBorja Cabal-PazElena GardellaPablo Gómez-PorroOtilia Martínez-MúgicaÁlvaro Beltrán-CorbelliniRafael Toledano-DelgadoIrene García-MoralesAntonio Gil-Nagel
Published in: Epilepsia open (2022)
SCN8A-developmental and epileptic encephalopathy is caused by pathogenic variants in the SCN8A gene encoding the Na v 1.6 sodium channel, and is characterized by intractable multivariate seizures and developmental regression. Fenfluramine is a repurposed drug with proven antiseizure efficacy in Dravet syndrome and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The effect of fenfluramine treatment was assessed in a retrospective series of three patients with intractable SCN8A epilepsy and severe neurodevelopmental comorbidity (n = 2 females; age 2.8-13 years; 8-16 prior failed antiseizure medications [ASM]; treatment duration: 0.75-4.2 years). In the 6 months prior to receiving fenfluramine, patients experienced multiple seizure types, including generalized tonic-clonic, focal and myoclonic seizures, and status epilepticus. Overall seizure reduction was 60%-90% in the last 3, 6, and 12 months of fenfluramine treatment. Clinically meaningful improvement was noted in ≥1 non-seizure comorbidity per patient after fenfluramine, as assessed by physician-ratings of ≥"Much Improved" on the Clinical Global Impression of Improvement scale. Improvements included ambulation in a previously non-ambulant patient and better attention, sleep, and language. One patient showed mild irritability which resolved; no other treatment-related adverse events were reported. There were no reports of valvular heart disease or pulmonary arterial hypertension. Fenfluramine may be a promising ASM for randomized clinical trials in SCN8A-related disorders.
Keyphrases
  • pulmonary arterial hypertension
  • case report
  • emergency department
  • primary care
  • gene expression
  • autism spectrum disorder
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  • transcription factor
  • working memory
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  • replacement therapy