Frontiers in Neurology (Sep 2022)

Genetic and molecular features of seizure-freedom following surgical resections for focal epilepsy: A pilot study

  • Shreya Louis,
  • Robyn M. Busch,
  • Robyn M. Busch,
  • Robyn M. Busch,
  • Dennis Lal,
  • Dennis Lal,
  • Jennifer Hockings,
  • Jennifer Hockings,
  • Jennifer Hockings,
  • Jennifer Hockings,
  • Olivia Hogue,
  • Marcia Morita-Sherman,
  • Deborah Vegh,
  • Imad Najm,
  • Imad Najm,
  • Chaitali Ghosh,
  • Chaitali Ghosh,
  • Peter Bazeley,
  • Charis Eng,
  • Charis Eng,
  • Charis Eng,
  • Charis Eng,
  • Lara Jehi,
  • Lara Jehi,
  • Lara Jehi,
  • Daniel M. Rotroff,
  • Daniel M. Rotroff,
  • Daniel M. Rotroff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2022.942643
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectiveSeizure outcomes after brain surgery for drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) are very heterogeneous and difficult to predict with models utilizing the current clinical, imaging, and electrophysiological variables. In this pilot study, we investigated whether genetic and molecular biomarkers (e.g., genomic, transcriptomic) can provide additional insight into differential response to surgery.MethodsPost-operative seizure-outcomes were collected at last follow-up (>6 months) for 201 adult patients with DRE who underwent surgery between 2004 and 2020. Resected tissue was sent for miRNA sequencing (n = 132) and mRNA sequencing (n = 135). Following the selection of 10 genes (SCN1A, NBEA, PTEN, GABRA1, LGL1, DEPDC5, IL1A, ABCB1, C3, CALHM1), we investigated SNPs in those 10 genes from previously acquired exome sequencing data (n = 106). Logistic regression was performed to test for associations between individual features (mRNAs, miRNAs, and SNPs) and post-operative seizure-outcome with an exploratory FDR P < 0.25 as the threshold for significance. Post-operative time-to-seizure analyses were performed for each SNP using a Cox proportional hazards model.ResultsThe majority of patients (83%) had temporal lobe epilepsy. Mean age at surgery was 38.3 years, and 56% were female. Three SNPs (rs10276036, rs11975994, rs1128503) in multi-drug resistance gene, ABCB1, were associated with post-operative seizure outcomes. Patients with alternate alleles in ABCB1 were more likely to be seizure-free at last follow-up (52–56% reduction in seizure recurrence; FDR P = 0.24). All three SNPs were in linkage disequilibrium and highly correlated with each other. Median post-operative time-to-seizure was 63 months for patients with 2 alternate alleles, 24–33 months with 1 alternate allele, and 10–11 months with 0 alternate alleles. These SNPs improved outcome prediction beyond MRI and sex alone. No independent miRNAs or mRNAs were significantly associated with seizure-outcome (P > 0.05). However, pathway analysis identified “cancer drug resistance by drug efflux” (mir-154 and mir-379) as enriched (P = 0.02), supporting the role of drug response genes in post-operative seizure recurrence.SignificanceABCB1 may have a role in epileptogenesis and surgery outcomes independent of its drug efflux activity necessitating further investigation. SNPs in ABCB1 may serve as independent predictors of post-operative outcome.

Keywords