Skip to main content

Table 7 Treatment outcomes of patients with early-onset epileptic encephalopathies

From: Treating the symptom or treating the disease in neonatal seizures: a systematic review of the literature

N of patients

Gene mutation

Response to carbamazepine

N (%)

Response to lidocaine

N (%)

Response to phenytoin

N (%)

Response to other AEDS

N (%)

Maintenance

Side effects

Follow-up

66

KCNQ2

40 (61%) Carbamazepine

4 (6%)

lidocaine

7 (10%)

phenytoin

13 (20%) combination of drugs, including Na-channel blockers

44 (66%) carbamazepine

1 methemoglobinemia (on lidocaine)

Follow-up: from 3 months to 10 years. Normal development for BFNE; severe developmental delay in KCNQ2 encephalopathy

6

KCNQ3

1 (16%)

oxcarbazepine (20 mg/kg)

/

/

2 (33%) levetiracetam (70–85 mg/kg)

1 (16%) oxcarbazepine

2 (33%) levetiracetam

None reported

Normal up to 4 years

1

KCNT1

/

/

0 (0%)

No response to phenobarbital, lamotrigine, or benzodiazepines.

1 (100%) levetiracetam 10–30 mg/kg

levetiracetam 30 mg/kg/day

None reported

Seizure decrease (still 1 episode/day) at 14 months

1

SCN2A

/

/

1 (100%) phenytoin 20 mg/kg

/

carbamazepine 30 mg/kg

None reported

Severe developmental delay at 2 years

1

SCN1A

/

/

/

1 (100%) valproate 50 mg/kg

valproate 50 mg/kg

N/A

Severe developmental delay at 3 years

1

SCN8A

0 (0%) oxcarbazepine 80 mg/kg

 

0 (0%) phenytoin 20 mg/kg

Seizure reduction on a combination of oxcarbazepine, phenytoin, and lamotrigine

phenytoin, oxcarbazepine, phenobarbital, lamotrigine

N/A

Daily seizures at 6 months