SCN9A should not be considered an epilepsy gene; Refuting a gene-disease association

Ghanty, Ismael; Perez-Palma, Eduardo; Villaman, Camilo; Stobo, Daniel; Symonds, Joseph; Zuberi, Sameer; Lal, Dennis; Brunklaus, Andreas

Abstract

ObjectiveThe SCN9A gene is primarily expressed in nociceptive pathways within the peripheral nervous system, and pathogenic variants are associated with human pain disorders. In recent years, several studies have proposed SCN9A as a monogenic cause of epilepsy. Our objective was to critically appraise the SCN9A-epilepsy gene-disease relationship.MethodsWe assessed "epilepsy-associated" SCN9A variants from four sources: (1) the literature up to December 2023 (n = 27), (2) epilepsy patients referred for genetic testing at a regional service in Glasgow, UK over a 5-year period (n = 30), (3) the Human Genetics Mutation Database (n = 25), and (4) ClinVar (n = 1546). The latter two are genome-wide variant databases, accepting submissions from genetic laboratories and research groups. We checked whether each SCN9A variant is present in the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) V4 (a reference population database for variant interpretation), and classified its pathogenicity based on the American College of Molecular Genetics and Genomics/Association of Molecular Pathologists guidelines.ResultsOnly three SCN9A variants were classified as "likely pathogenic," of which two were identified in healthy individuals in gnomAD. A total of 1540 of the 1546 SCN9A variants in ClinVar labeled as being associated with epilepsy were also reported in association with hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy. No further clinical data were provided in 1482 of these submissions.SignificanceThere is no convincing genetic evidence to support SCN9A as a causative epilepsy gene. As such, the inclusion of SCN9A in epilepsy genetic testing panels should be reassessed. Research centers and genetic testing laboratories should be rigorous and consistent in their submissions to variant databases.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:001505172900001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: EPILEPSIA
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2025
DOI:

10.1111/epi.18474

Notas: ISI