Birgit Jepsen
University of Southern Denmark
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Publication
Featured researches published by Birgit Jepsen.
Neurology | 2015
Jan Larsen; Gemma L. Carvill; Elena Gardella; Gerhard Kluger; Gudrun Schmiedel; Nina Barišić; Christel Depienne; Eva H. Brilstra; Yuan Mang; J. E. K. Nielsen; Martin Kirkpatrick; David Goudie; Rebecca Goldman; Johanna A. Jähn; Birgit Jepsen; Deepak Gill; Miriam Döcker; Saskia Biskup; Jacinta M. McMahon; Bobby P. C. Koeleman; Mandy Harris; Kees P. J. Braun; Carolien G.F. de Kovel; Carla Marini; Nicola Specchio; Tania Djémié; Sarah Weckhuysen; Niels Tommerup; M. Troncoso; L. Troncoso
Objective: SCN8A encodes the sodium channel voltage-gated α8-subunit (Nav1.6). SCN8A mutations have recently been associated with epilepsy and neurodevelopmental disorders. We aimed to delineate the phenotype associated with SCN8A mutations. Methods: We used high-throughput sequence analysis of the SCN8A gene in 683 patients with a range of epileptic encephalopathies. In addition, we ascertained cases with SCN8A mutations from other centers. A detailed clinical history was obtained together with a review of EEG and imaging data. Results: Seventeen patients with de novo heterozygous mutations of SCN8A were studied. Seizure onset occurred at a mean age of 5 months (range: 1 day to 18 months); in general, seizures were not triggered by fever. Fifteen of 17 patients had multiple seizure types including focal, tonic, clonic, myoclonic and absence seizures, and epileptic spasms; seizures were refractory to antiepileptic therapy. Development was normal in 12 patients and slowed after seizure onset, often with regression; 5 patients had delayed development from birth. All patients developed intellectual disability, ranging from mild to severe. Motor manifestations were prominent including hypotonia, dystonia, hyperreflexia, and ataxia. EEG findings comprised moderate to severe background slowing with focal or multifocal epileptiform discharges. Conclusion: SCN8A encephalopathy presents in infancy with multiple seizure types including focal seizures and spasms in some cases. Outcome is often poor and includes hypotonia and movement disorders. The majority of mutations arise de novo, although we observed a single case of somatic mosaicism in an unaffected parent.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2006
Anne-Marie Bisgaard; Maria Kirchhoff; Zeynep Tümer; Birgit Jepsen; Karen Brøndum-Nielsen; Monika Cohen; Bente Hamborg-Petersen; Thue Bryndorf; Niels Tommerup; Flemming Skovby
The detection of chromosomal abnormalities in patients with mental retardation (MR) and dysmorphic features increases with improvements of molecular cytogenetic methods. We report on six patients referred for detailed characterization of chromosomal abnormalities (four translocations, one inversion, one deletion) detected by conventional cytogenetics, in whom metaphase CGH revealed imbalances not involved in the initially detected rearrangements. The detected abnormalities were validated by real‐time PCR. Parents were investigated by CGH in four cases. The genomic screening revealed interstitial deletions of 2q33.2‐q34, 3p21, 4q12‐q13.1, 6q25, 13q22.2‐q31.1, and 14q12. The estimated minimum sizes of the deletions ranged from 2.65 to 9.27 Mb. The CGH assay did not reveal imbalances that colocalized with the breakpoints of the inversion or the translocations. The deletion of 6q included ESR1, in which polymorphisms are associated with variation of adult height. FOXG1B, known to be involved in cortical development, was located in the 14q deletion. The results illustrate that whole‐genome molecular cytogenetic analysis of phenotypically affected patients with abnormal conventional karyotypes may detect inapparent molecular cytogenetic abnormalities in patients with microscopic chromosomal abnormalities and that these data provide additional information of clinical importance.
Molecular Syndromology | 2016
Rikke S. Møller; Line H.G. Larsen; Katrine Johannesen; Inga Talvik; Tiina Talvik; Ulvi Vaher; Maria J Miranda; Muhammad Farooq; J. E. K. Nielsen; Lene Lavard Svendsen; Ditte Brix Kjelgaard; Karen Markussen Linnet; Qin Hao; Peter Uldall; Mimoza Frangu; Niels Tommerup; Shahid Mahmood Baig; Uzma Abdullah; Alfred Peter Born; Pia Gellert; Marina Nikanorova; Kern Olofsson; Birgit Jepsen; D. Marjanovic; Lana I.K. Al-Zehhawi; Sofia J. Peñalva; Bente Krag-Olsen; Klaus Brusgaard; Helle Hjalgrim; Guido Rubboli
In recent years, several genes have been causally associated with epilepsy. However, making a genetic diagnosis in a patient can still be difficult, since extensive phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity has been observed in many monogenic epilepsies. This study aimed to analyze the genetic basis of a wide spectrum of epilepsies with age of onset spanning from the neonatal period to adulthood. A gene panel targeting 46 epilepsy genes was used on a cohort of 216 patients consecutively referred for panel testing. The patients had a range of different epilepsies from benign neonatal seizures to epileptic encephalopathies (EEs). Potentially causative variants were evaluated by literature and database searches, submitted to bioinformatic prediction algorithms, and validated by Sanger sequencing. If possible, parents were included for segregation analysis. We identified a presumed disease-causing variant in 49 (23%) of the 216 patients. The variants were found in 19 different genes including SCN1A, STXBP1, CDKL5, SCN2A, SCN8A, GABRA1, KCNA2, and STX1B. Patients with neonatal-onset epilepsies had the highest rate of positive findings (57%). The overall yield for patients with EEs was 32%, compared to 17% among patients with generalized epilepsies and 16% in patients with focal or multifocal epilepsies. By the use of a gene panel consisting of 46 epilepsy genes, we were able to find a disease-causing genetic variation in 23% of the analyzed patients. The highest yield was found among patients with neonatal-onset epilepsies and EEs.
Epilepsia | 2015
Jan Larsen; Katrine Johannesen; Jakob Ek; Shan Tang; Carla Marini; Susanne Blichfeldt; Maria Kibæk; Sarah von Spiczak; Sarah Weckhuysen; Mimoza Frangu; Bernd A. Neubauer; Peter Uldall; Pasquale Striano; Federico Zara; Rebecca Kleiss; Michael A. Simpson; Hiltrud Muhle; Marina Nikanorova; Birgit Jepsen; Niels Tommerup; Ulrich Stephani; Renzo Guerrini; Morten Duno; Helle Hjalgrim; Deb K. Pal; Ingo Helbig; Rikke S. Møller
The first mutations identified in SLC2A1, encoding the glucose transporter type 1 (GLUT1) protein of the blood–brain barrier, were associated with severe epileptic encephalopathy. Recently, dominant SLC2A1 mutations were found in rare autosomal dominant families with various forms of epilepsy including early onset absence epilepsy (EOAE), myoclonic astatic epilepsy (MAE), and genetic generalized epilepsy (GGE). Our study aimed to investigate the possible role of SLC2A1 in various forms of epilepsy including MAE and absence epilepsy with early onset. We also aimed to estimate the frequency of GLUT1 deficiency syndrome in the Danish population. One hundred twenty patients with MAE, 50 patients with absence epilepsy, and 37 patients with unselected epilepsies, intellectual disability (ID), and/or various movement disorders were screened for mutations in SLC2A1. Mutations in SLC2A1 were detected in 5 (10%) of 50 patients with absence epilepsy, and in one (2.7%) of 37 patient with unselected epilepsies, ID, and/or various movement disorders. None of the 120 MAE patients harbored SLC2A1 mutations. We estimated the frequency of SLC2A1 mutations in the Danish population to be approximately 1:83,000. Our study confirmed the role of SLC2A1 mutations in absence epilepsy with early onset. However, our study failed to support the notion that SLC2A1 aberrations are a cause of MAE without associated features such as movement disorders.
Neurology | 2018
Elena Gardella; Carla Marini; Marina Trivisano; Mark P. Fitzgerald; Michael Alber; Katherine B. Howell; Francesca Darra; Sabrina Siliquini; Bigna K. Bölsterli; Silva Masnada; Anna Pichiecchio; Katrine Johannesen; Birgit Jepsen; Elena Fontana; Gaia Anibaldi; Silvia Russo; Francesca Cogliati; Martino Montomoli; Nicola Specchio; Guido Rubboli; Pierangelo Veggiotti; Sándor Beniczky; Markus Wolff; Ingo Helbig; Federico Vigevano; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Renzo Guerrini; Rikke S. Møller
Objective To delineate the electroclinical features of SCN8A infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE13, OMIM #614558). Methods Twenty-two patients, aged 19 months to 22 years, underwent electroclinical assessment. Results Sixteen of 22 patients had mildly delayed development since birth. Drug-resistant epilepsy started at a median age of 4 months, followed by developmental slowing, pyramidal/extrapyramidal signs (22/22), movement disorders (12/22), cortical blindness (17/22), sialorrhea, and severe gastrointestinal symptoms (15/22), worsening during early childhood and plateauing at age 5 to 9 years. Death occurred in 4 children, following extreme neurologic deterioration, at 22 months to 5.5 years. Nonconvulsive status epilepticus recurred in 14 of 22 patients. The most effective antiepileptic drugs were oxcarbazepine, carbamazepine, phenytoin, and benzodiazepines. EEG showed background deterioration, epileptiform abnormalities with a temporo-occipital predominance, and posterior delta/beta activity correlating with visual impairment. Video-EEG documented focal seizures (FS) (22/22), spasm-like episodes (8/22), cortical myoclonus (8/22), and myoclonic absences (1/22). FS typically clustered and were prolonged (<20 minutes) with (1) cyanosis, hypomotor, and vegetative semiology, sometimes unnoticed, followed by (2) tonic-vibratory and (3) (hemi)-clonic manifestations ± evolution to a bilateral tonic-clonic seizure. FS had posterior-temporal/occipital onset, slowly spreading and sometimes migrating between hemispheres. Brain MRI showed progressive parenchymal atrophy and restriction of the optic radiations. Conclusions: SCN8A developmental and epileptic encephalopathy has strikingly consistent electroclinical features, suggesting a global progressive brain dysfunction primarily affecting the temporo-occipital regions. Both uncontrolled epilepsy and developmental compromise contribute to the profound impairment (increasing risk of death) during early childhood, but stabilization occurs in late childhood.
European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2007
Anne-Marie Bisgaard; Maria Kirchhoff; Jens Erik Nielsen; Carsten Brandt; Hanne Hove; Birgit Jepsen; Tim Kåre Jensen; Reinhard Ullmann; Flemming Skovby
European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011
Eva Wohlleber; Maria Kirchhoff; Alexander M. Zink; Martina Kreiß-Nachtsheim; Alma Küchler; Birgit Jepsen; Susanne Kjaergaard; Hartmut Engels
Epilepsia | 2017
Line H.G. Larsen; Qin Hao; N. Kako; Kern Olofsson; Maria J Miranda; Maria Kinali; I. Borggraefe; D. Svaneby; J. E. K. Nielsen; L. Lavard; Peter Uldall; Tiina Talvik; Inga Talvik; C. Fusco; C. Spagnoli; Mimoza Frangu; P. Born; P. Striano; Deb K. Pal; S. Oates; Pia Gellert; Marina Nikanorova; Michael B. Petersen; Charlotte Kvist Lautrup; Klaus Brusgaard; U. Dunkhase-Heinl; M. Rokkjr; A. Bayat; Y. Petkov; M. L. Borresen
Epilepsy Currents | 2015
Elena Gardella; Jan Larsen; Markus Wolff; Gudrun Schmiedel; Martin Kirkpatrick; Nina Barišić; Christel Depienne; M. Troncoso; Birgit Jepsen; Marina Nikanorova; L. Troncoso; Andrea Bevot; Helle Hjalgrim; Sándor Beniczky; R. S. Moller
Epilepsia | 2015
Hans Atli Dahl; Line H.G. Larsen; Kern Olofsson; M. Miranda; J. E. K. Nielsen; L. Lavard; Karen Markussen Linnet; Peter Uldall; Tiina Talvik; Inga Talvik; M. Frangu; P. Born; Pia Gellert; Marina Nikanorova; Birgit Jepsen; D. Marjanovic; B. Kragh-Olsen; Mai-Britt Mosbech; Qin Hao; Klaus Brusgaard; Helle Hjalgrim; Rikke S. Møller