Syndromic and non-syndromic epilepsy extended analysis Code R-170 Analysis to be performed in trio
- Description
- Number Genes
- Prevalence
- Indications and clinical utility
- Test performed and limitations
- Other Specialities
The underlying causes of epilepsy are multiple and heterogeneous. Some forms of epilepsy will have an identifiable genetic cause and more and more genes are known to be responsible for some of these forms of epilepsy, previously labelled 'idiopathic'. The genetic analysis aimed at the molecular diagnosis of epilepsies proposed by R&I Genetics encompasses a wide range of clinical phenotypes, from non-syndromic to syndromic epilepsies, epileptic encephalopathies and neurodevelopmental disorders that can also manifest as seizures.
1061 genes
5-8/1.000
Multigenic panel aimed at the molecular diagnosis of epilepsies, including syndromic and non-syndromic epilepsies, benign neonatal epilepsy, epileptic encephalopathy, glycine encephalopathy, febrile epilepsy focal epilepsy, temporal lobe epilepsy, myoclonic epilepsy, nocturnal epilepsy, pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy, Doose syndrome, Dravet syndrome, neurodevelopmental disorders associated with epilepsy.
Method: NGS sequencing, determination of SNVs (Single Nucleotide Variants), small insertions and deletions and CNVs (Copy Number Variants).
Limits: The test is unable to determine the presence of underrepresented somatic events, balanced chromosomal rearrangements, nucleotide expansion events of repeat regions, CNVs <3 contiguous exons. <3 esoni contigui.
Some genes may have low coverage areas, where necessary or upon specific request, within the limits of methodological limitations, sequencing can be completed with alternative methods (Sanger). Some genes may be duplicated in the genome (pseudogenes), which may invalidate the analysis.
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