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Featured researches published by Sébastien Lebon.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2016

Defining the Effect of the 16p11.2 Duplication on Cognition, Behavior, and Medical Comorbidities

Debra D'Angelo; Sébastien Lebon; Qixuan Chen; Sandra Martin-Brevet; LeeAnne Green Snyder; Loyse Hippolyte; Ellen Hanson; Anne M. Maillard; W. Andrew Faucett; Aurélien Macé; Aurélie Pain; Raphael Bernier; Samuel Chawner; Albert David; Joris Andrieux; Elizabeth H. Aylward; Genevieve Baujat; Ines Caldeira; Philippe Conus; Carrina Ferrari; Francesca Forzano; Marion Gerard; Robin P. Goin-Kochel; Ellen Grant; Jill V. Hunter; Bertrand Isidor; Aurélia Jacquette; Aia Elise Jønch; Boris Keren; Didier Lacombe

IMPORTANCE The 16p11.2 BP4-BP5 duplication is the copy number variant most frequently associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), schizophrenia, and comorbidities such as decreased body mass index (BMI). OBJECTIVES To characterize the effects of the 16p11.2 duplication on cognitive, behavioral, medical, and anthropometric traits and to understand the specificity of these effects by systematically comparing results in duplication carriers and reciprocal deletion carriers, who are also at risk for ASD. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This international cohort study of 1006 study participants compared 270 duplication carriers with their 102 intrafamilial control individuals, 390 reciprocal deletion carriers, and 244 deletion controls from European and North American cohorts. Data were collected from August 1, 2010, to May 31, 2015 and analyzed from January 1 to August 14, 2015. Linear mixed models were used to estimate the effect of the duplication and deletion on clinical traits by comparison with noncarrier relatives. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Findings on the Full-Scale IQ (FSIQ), Nonverbal IQ, and Verbal IQ; the presence of ASD or other DSM-IV diagnoses; BMI; head circumference; and medical data. RESULTS Among the 1006 study participants, the duplication was associated with a mean FSIQ score that was lower by 26.3 points between proband carriers and noncarrier relatives and a lower mean FSIQ score (16.2-11.4 points) in nonproband carriers. The mean overall effect of the deletion was similar (-22.1 points; P < .001). However, broad variation in FSIQ was found, with a 19.4- and 2.0-fold increase in the proportion of FSIQ scores that were very low (≤40) and higher than the mean (>100) compared with the deletion group (P < .001). Parental FSIQ predicted part of this variation (approximately 36.0% in hereditary probands). Although the frequency of ASD was similar in deletion and duplication proband carriers (16.0% and 20.0%, respectively), the FSIQ was significantly lower (by 26.3 points) in the duplication probands with ASD. There also were lower head circumference and BMI measurements among duplication carriers, which is consistent with the findings of previous studies. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The mean effect of the duplication on cognition is similar to that of the reciprocal deletion, but the variance in the duplication is significantly higher, with severe and mild subgroups not observed with the deletion. These results suggest that additional genetic and familial factors contribute to this variability. Additional studies will be necessary to characterize the predictors of cognitive deficits.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

16p11.2 600 kb Duplications confer risk for typical and atypical Rolandic epilepsy

Eva M. Reinthaler; Dennis Lal; Sébastien Lebon; Michael S. Hildebrand; Hans Henrik M Dahl; Brigid M. Regan; Martha Feucht; Hannelore Steinböck; Birgit Neophytou; Gabriel M. Ronen; Laurian Roche; Ursula Gruber-Sedlmayr; Julia Geldner; Edda Haberlandt; Per Hoffmann; Stefan Herms; Christian Gieger; Melanie Waldenberger; Andre Franke; Michael Wittig; Susanne Schoch; Albert J. Becker; Andreas Hahn; Katrin Männik; Mohammad R. Toliat; Georg Winterer; Holger Lerche; Peter Nürnberg; Mefford Hc; Ingrid E. Scheffer

Rolandic epilepsy (RE) is the most common idiopathic focal childhood epilepsy. Its molecular basis is largely unknown and a complex genetic etiology is assumed in the majority of affected individuals. The present study tested whether six large recurrent copy number variants at 1q21, 15q11.2, 15q13.3, 16p11.2, 16p13.11 and 22q11.2 previously associated with neurodevelopmental disorders also increase risk of RE. Our association analyses revealed a significant excess of the 600 kb genomic duplication at the 16p11.2 locus (chr16: 29.5-30.1 Mb) in 393 unrelated patients with typical (n = 339) and atypical (ARE; n = 54) RE compared with the prevalence in 65,046 European population controls (5/393 cases versus 32/65,046 controls; Fishers exact test P = 2.83 × 10(-6), odds ratio = 26.2, 95% confidence interval: 7.9-68.2). In contrast, the 16p11.2 duplication was not detected in 1738 European epilepsy patients with either temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 330) and genetic generalized epilepsies (n = 1408), suggesting a selective enrichment of the 16p11.2 duplication in idiopathic focal childhood epilepsies (Fishers exact test P = 2.1 × 10(-4)). In a subsequent screen among children carrying the 16p11.2 600 kb rearrangement we identified three patients with RE-spectrum epilepsies in 117 duplication carriers (2.6%) but none in 202 carriers of the reciprocal deletion. Our results suggest that the 16p11.2 duplication represents a significant genetic risk factor for typical and atypical RE.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2012

Anti-N-Methyl-d-Aspartate (NMDA) Receptor Encephalitis Mimicking a Primary Psychiatric Disorder in an Adolescent

Sébastien Lebon; Claire Mayor-Dubois; Irina Popea; Claudia Poloni; Nalini Selvadoray; Alain Gumy; Eliane Roulet-Perez

Anti-N-methyl-d-aspartate (anti-NMDA) receptor encephalitis likely has a wider clinical spectrum than previously recognized. This article reports a previously healthy 16-year-old girl who was diagnosed with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis 3 months after onset of severe depression with psychotic features. She had no neurological manifestations, and cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was normal. Slow background on electroencephalogram and an oligoclonal band in the cerebrospinal fluid prompted the search for anti-NMDA receptor antibodies. She markedly improved over time but remained with mild neuropsychological sequelae after a trial of late immunotherapy. Only a high index of suspicion enables recognition of the milder forms of the disease masquerading as primary psychiatric disorders.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2015

Early-onset encephalopathy with epilepsy associated with a novel splice site mutation in SMC1A

Nicolas Lebrun; Sébastien Lebon; Pierre-Yves Jeannet; Sébastien Jacquemont; Pierre Billuart; Thierry Bienvenu

We report on the clinical and molecular characterization of a female patient with early‐onset epileptic encephalopathy, who was found to carry a de novo novel splice site mutation in SMC1A. This girl shared some morphologic and anthropometric traits described in patients with clinical diagnosis of Cornelia de Lange syndrome and with SMC1A mutation but also has severe encephalopathy with early‐onset epilepsy. In addition, she had midline hand stereotypies and scoliosis leading to the misdiagnosis of a Rett overlap syndrome. Molecular studies found a novel de novo splice site mutation (c.1911 + 1G > T) in SMC1A. This novel splice mutation was associated with an aberrantly processed mRNA that included intron 11 of the gene. Moreover, quantitative approach by RT‐PCR showed a severe reduction of the SMC1A transcript suggesting that this aberrant transcript may be unstable and degraded. Taken together, our data suggest that the phenotype may be due to a loss‐of‐function of SMC1A in this patient. Our findings suggest that loss‐of‐function mutations of SMC1A may be associated with early‐onset encephalopathy with epilepsy.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2016

Perinatal arterial ischemic stroke related to carotid artery occlusion

Joel Victor Fluss; Stephanie Garcia-Tarodo; Michèle Granier; Frédéric Villega; Solène Ferey; Béatrice Husson; Manoelle Kossorotoff; Vincent Muehlethaler; Sébastien Lebon; Stéphane Chabrier

BACKGROUND The aetiology of perinatal arterial ischemic stroke remains speculative. It is however widely accepted that the aetiology is multifactorial, involving various maternal, placental, foetal and neonatal risk factors. A resulting thromboembolic process is hypothesized and the placenta identified as the most plausible source. An arteriopathy, as observed in a significant proportion of childhood ischemic stroke, is thought to be rare. METHODS We report here five cases of perinatal stroke that differ from the vast majority by documented carotid occlusion, and add eleven other similar cases from the literature. RESULTS In the majority, an intraluminal thrombus of placental origin is the most probable hypothesis, while in the remaining ones, one can reasonably presume a direct vessel wall injury related to a traumatic delivery, yet generally unproven by imaging. CONCLUSION We hypothesize that most of these cases share similar pathophysiology with the more common perinatal arterial ischemic stroke but differ by a persistent identified thrombus in the carotid artery at the time of first imaging, leading to a more severe and extended ischemic damage responsible for an adverse neurological outcome.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2016

Large national series of patients with Xq28 duplication involving MECP2: Delineation of brain MRI abnormalities in 30 affected patients.

Salima El Chehadeh; Laurence Faivre; Anne-Laure Mosca-Boidron; Valérie Malan; Jeanne Amiel; Mathilde Nizon; Renaud Touraine; Fabienne Prieur; Laurent Pasquier; Patrick Callier; Mathilde Lefebvre; Nathalie Marle; Christèle Dubourg; Sophie Julia; Catherine Sarret; Christine Francannet; Fanny Laffargue; Odile Boespflug-Tanguy; Albert David; Bertrand Isidor; Cédric Le Caignec; Jacqueline Vigneron; Bruno Leheup; Laetitia Lambert; Christophe Philippe; Jean-Marie Cuisset; Joris Andrieux; Ghislaine Plessis; Annick Toutain; Alice Goldenberg

Xq28 duplications encompassing MECP2 have been described in male patients with a severe neurodevelopmental disorder associated with hypotonia and spasticity, severe learning disability, stereotyped movements, and recurrent pulmonary infections. We report on standardized brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data of 30 affected patients carrying an Xq28 duplication involving MECP2 of various sizes (228 kb to 11.7 Mb). The aim of this study was to seek recurrent malformations and attempt to determine whether variations in imaging features could be explained by differences in the size of the duplications. We showed that 93% of patients had brain MRI abnormalities such as corpus callosum abnormalities (n = 20), reduced volume of the white matter (WM) (n = 12), ventricular dilatation (n = 9), abnormal increased hyperintensities on T2‐weighted images involving posterior periventricular WM (n = 6), and vermis hypoplasia (n = 5). The occipitofrontal circumference varied considerably between >+2SD in five patients and <−2SD in four patients. Among the nine patients with dilatation of the lateral ventricles, six had a duplication involving L1CAM. The only patient harboring bilateral posterior subependymal nodular heterotopia also carried an FLNA gene duplication. We could not demonstrate a correlation between periventricular WM hyperintensities/delayed myelination and duplication of the IKBKG gene. We thus conclude that patients with an Xq28 duplication involving MECP2 share some similar but non‐specific brain abnormalities. These imaging features, therefore, could not constitute a diagnostic clue. The genotype–phenotype correlation failed to demonstrate a relationship between the presence of nodular heterotopia, ventricular dilatation, WM abnormalities, and the presence of FLNA, L1CAM, or IKBKG, respectively, in the duplicated segment.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2015

When should clinicians search for GLUT1 deficiency syndrome in childhood generalized epilepsies

Sébastien Lebon; Philippe Suarez; Semsa Alija; Christian Korff; Joel Victor Fluss; Danielle Mercati; Alexandre N. Datta; Claudia Poloni; Jean-Pierre Marcoz; Ana Belinda Campos-Xavier; Luisa Bonafé; Eliane Roulet-Perez

UNLABELLED GLUT1 deficiency (GLUT1D) has recently been identified as an important cause of generalized epilepsies in childhood. As it is a treatable condition, it is crucial to determine which patients should be investigated. METHODS We analyzed SLC2A1 for mutations in a group of 93 unrelated children with generalized epilepsies. Fasting lumbar puncture was performed following the identification of a mutation. We compared our results with a systematic review of 7 publications of series of patients with generalized epilepsies screened for SLC2A1 mutations. RESULTS We found 2/93 (2.1%) patients with a SLC2A1 mutation. One, carrying a novel de novo deletion had epilepsy with myoclonic-atonic seizures (MAE), mild slowing of head growth, choreiform movements and developmental delay. The other, with a paternally inherited missense mutation, had childhood absence epilepsy with atypical EEG features and paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia (PED) initially misdiagnosed as myoclonic seizures. Out of a total of 1110 screened patients with generalized epilepsies from 7 studies, 2.4% (29/1110) had GLUT1D. This rate was higher (5.6%) among 303 patients with early onset absence epilepsy (EOAE) from 4 studies. About 50% of GLUT1D patients had abnormal movements and 41% a family history of seizures, abnormal movements or both. CONCLUSION GLUT1D is most likely to be found in MAE and in EOAE. The probability of finding GLUT1D in the classical idiopathic generalized epilepsies is very low. Pointers to GLUT1D include an increase in seizures before meals, cognitive impairment, or PED which can easily be overlooked.


Epilepsy Research | 2014

When is a child with status epilepticus likely to have Dravet syndrome

François Le Gal; Sébastien Lebon; Gian Paolo Ramelli; Alexandre N. Datta; Danielle Mercati; Oliver Maier; Christophe Combescure; Maria I. Rodriguez; Margitta Seeck; Eliane Roulet; Christian Korff

PURPOSE To identify clinical risk factors for Dravet syndrome (DS) in a population of children with status epilepticus (SE). MATERIAL AND METHODS Children aged between 1 month and 16 years with at least one episode of SE were referred from 6 pediatric neurology centers in Switzerland. SE was defined as a clinical seizure lasting for more than 30min without recovery of normal consciousness. The diagnosis of DS was considered likely in previously healthy patients with seizures of multiple types starting before 1 year and developmental delay on follow-up. The presence of a SCN1A mutation was considered confirmatory for the diagnosis. Data such as gender, age at SE, SE clinical presentation and recurrence, additional seizure types and epilepsy diagnosis were collected. SCN1A analyses were performed in all patients, initially with High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis (HRMCA) and then by direct sequencing on selected samples with an abnormal HRMCA. Clinical and genetic findings were compared between children with DS and those with another diagnosis, and statistical methods were applied for significance analysis. RESULTS 71 children with SE were included. Ten children had DS, and 61 had another diagnosis. SCN1A mutations were found in 12 of the 71 patients (16.9%; ten with DS, and two with seizures in a Generalized Epilepsy with Febrile Seizures+(GEFS+) context). The median age at first SE was 8 months in patients with DS, and 41 months in those with another epilepsy syndrome (p<0.001). Nine of the 10 DS patients had their initial SE before 18 months. Among the 26 patients aged 18 months or less at initial SE, the risk of DS was significantly increased for patients with two or more episodes (56.3%), as compared with those who had only one episode (0.0%) (p=0.005). CONCLUSION In a population of children with SE, patients most likely to have DS are those who present their initial SE episode before 18 months, and who present with recurrent SE episodes.


Human Mutation | 2018

Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly due to ASPM mutations: An update.

Pascaline Letard; Séverine Drunat; Yoann Vial; Sarah Duerinckx; Anais Ernault; Daniel Amram; Stephanie Arpin; Marta Bertoli; Tiffany Busa; Berten Ceulemans; Julie Désir; Martine Doco-Fenzy; Siham Chafai Elalaoui; Koenraad Devriendt; Laurence Faivre; Christine Francannet; David Geneviève; Marion Gerard; Cyril Gitiaux; Sophie Julia; Sébastien Lebon; Toni Kasole Lubala; Michèle Mathieu-Dramard; Hélène Maurey; Julia Metreau; Sanaa Nasserereddine; Mathilde Nizon; Geneviève Pierquin; Nathalie Pouvreau; Clothilde Rivier-Ringenbach

Autosomal recessive microcephaly or microcephaly primary hereditary (MCPH) is a genetically heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by a reduction in brain volume, indirectly measured by an occipitofrontal circumference (OFC) 2 standard deviations or more below the age‐ and sex‐matched mean (−2SD) at birth and −3SD after 6 months, and leading to intellectual disability of variable severity. The abnormal spindle‐like microcephaly gene (ASPM), the human ortholog of the Drosophila melanogaster “abnormal spindle” gene (asp), encodes ASPM, a protein localized at the centrosome of apical neuroprogenitor cells and involved in spindle pole positioning during neurogenesis. Loss‐of‐function mutations in ASPM cause MCPH5, which affects the majority of all MCPH patients worldwide. Here, we report 47 unpublished patients from 39 families carrying 28 new ASPM mutations, and conduct an exhaustive review of the molecular, clinical, neuroradiological, and neuropsychological features of the 282 families previously reported (with 161 distinct ASPM mutations). Furthermore, we show that ASPM‐related microcephaly is not systematically associated with intellectual deficiency and discuss the association between the structural brain defects (strong reduction in cortical volume and surface area) that modify the cortical map of these patients and their cognitive abilities.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2011

An initial MRI picture of limbic encephalitis in subacute sclerosing panencephalitis

Sébastien Lebon; Philippe Maeder; Malin Maeder-Ingvar; Claudia Poloni; Claire Mayor-Dubois; Eliane Roulet-Perez; Pierre-Yves Jeannet

BACKGROUND Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare and severe long-term complication of measles. Hallmarks of this entity include progressive cognitive decline, myoclonia, a generalized periodic pattern on EEG and deep white matter abnormalities on MRI. However, imaging can be normal in early stages. AIM We report herein the case of a previously healthy 13-years-old girl with an unusual radiological presentation. RESULTS She presented with unilateral myoclonia, cognitive decline with memory impairment and a first brain MRI with swelling of both hippocampi mimicking limbic encephalitis. Measles antibodies were positive in CSF and the EEG showed slow periodic complexes. CONCLUSION This unusual radiological presentation has never been described in SSPE. Relationship between virus and limbic system are discussed.

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Claudia Poloni

Boston Children's Hospital

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Danielle Mercati

Boston Children's Hospital

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