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Is Focal Cortical Dysplasia/Epilepsy Caused by Somatic <i>MTOR</i> Mutations Always a Unilateral Disorder?

Renzo Guerrini, Mara Cavallin, Tommaso Pippucci, Anna Rosati, Francesca Bisulli, Paola Dimartino, Carmen Barba, Rita Garbelli, Anna Maria Buccoliero, Laura Tassi, Valerio Conti

2020Neurology Genetics34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<h3>Objective</h3> To alert about the wide margin of unpredictability that distribution of somatic <i>MTOR</i> mosaicism may have in the brain and the risk for independent epileptogenesis arising from the seemingly healthy contralateral hemisphere after complete removal of epileptogenic focal cortical dysplasia (FCD). <h3>Methods</h3> Clinical, EEG, MRI, histopathology, and molecular genetics in 2 patients (1 and 2) treated with focal resections and subsequent complete hemispherectomy for epileptogenic FCD due to somatic <i>MTOR</i> mutations. Autoptic brain study of bilateral asymmetric hemispheric dysplasia and identification of alternative allele fraction (AAF) rates for <i>AKT1</i> (patient 3). <h3>Results</h3> The strongly hyperactivating p.Ser2215Phe (patient 1) and p.Leu1460Pro (patient 2) <i>MTOR</i> mutations were at low-level AAF in the dysplastic tissue. After repeated resections and eventual complete hemispherectomy, both patients manifested intractable seizures arising from the contralateral, seemingly healthy hemisphere. In patient 3, the p.Glu17Lys <i>AKT1</i> mutation exhibited random distribution and AAF rates in different tissues with double levels in the more severely dysplastic cerebral hemisphere. <h3>Conclusions</h3> Our understanding of the distribution of somatic mutations in the brain in relation to the type of malformation and its hypothesized time of origin may be faulty. Large studies may reveal that the risk of a first surgery being disappointing might be related more to the specific somatic mammalian target of rapamycin mutation identified than to completeness of resection and that the advantages of repeated resections after a first unsuccessful operation should be weighed against the risk of the contralateral hemisphere becoming in turn epileptogenic.

Topics & Concepts

Cortical dysplasiaEpileptogenesisEpilepsyMedicinePathologyDysplasiaSomatic cellNeuroscienceBiologyGeneticsGeneEpilepsy research and treatmentNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchGenetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders