Archives of Medical Science (May 2016)

Association of SCN1A gene polymorphism with antiepileptic drug responsiveness in the population of Thrace, Greece

  • Christina Angelopoulou,
  • Stavroula Veletza,
  • Ioannis Heliopoulos,
  • Konstantinos Vadikolias,
  • Grigorios Tripsianis,
  • Chrysa Stathi,
  • Charitomeni Piperidou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5114/aoms.2016.59737
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 138 – 147

Abstract

Read online

Introduction : The aim was to examine the influence of the SCN1A gene polymorphism IVS5-91 rs3812718 G>A on the response to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) in monotherapy or polytherapy. Material and methods : Two hundred epilepsy patients and 200 healthy subjects were genotyped for SCN1A IVS5-91 rs3812718 G>A polymorphism using TaqMan assay. Patients were divided into drug-responsive and drug-resistant patients. The drug-responsive group was further studied, comparing monotherapy in maximum and minimum doses and monotherapy-responsive and -resistant groups. Results : There were no statistically significant differences in the allelic frequencies and genotype distributions between patients and controls (p = 0.178). The distribution of SCN1A IVS5-91 rs3812718 G>A genotypes was similar between drug-responsive and drug-resistant patients (p = 0.463). The differences in genotype distributions (A/A or A/G vs. G/G) between monotherapy-responsive and -resistant groups were statistically significant (p = 0.021). Within the monotherapy-responsive group, patients with the A/A or A/G genotype needed higher dose AEDs than patients with the G/G genotype (p = 0.032). The relative risk for generalized epilepsy due to A-containing genotypes was of marginal statistical significance when compared with the G/G genotype (p = 0.05). Conclusions : Overall, our findings demonstrate an association of SCN1A IVS5-91 rs3812718 G>A polymorphism with AED responsiveness in monotherapy without evidence of an effect on drug-resistant epilepsy.

Keywords