Evidence for epistatic interactions in antiepileptic drug resistance

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Abstract

To investigate the epistatic interactions involved in antiepileptic drug (AED) resistance, 26 coding single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were selected from 16 candidate genes. A total of 200 patients with drug-resistant localization-related epilepsy and 200 patients with drug-responsive localization-related epilepsy were genotyped individually for the SNPs. Rather than using the traditional parametric statistical method, a new statistical method, multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR), was used to determine whether gene-gene interactions increase the risk of AED resistance. The MDR method indicated that a combination of four SNPs (rs12658835 and rs35166395 from GABRA1, rs2228622 from EAAT3 and rs2304725 from GAT3) was the best model for predicting susceptibility to AED resistance with a statistically significant testing accuracy of 0.625 (P<0.001) and cross-validation consistency of 10/10. This best model had an odds ratio of 3.68 with a significant 95% confidence interval of 2.32-5.85 (P<0.0001). Our results may provide meaningful information on the mechanism underlying AED resistance and, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of evidence for gene-gene interactions underlying AED resistance. © 2011 The Japan Society of Human Genetics All rights reserved.

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Kim, M. K., Moore, J. H., Kim, J. K., Cho, K. H., Cho, Y. W., Kim, Y. S., … Shin, M. H. (2011). Evidence for epistatic interactions in antiepileptic drug resistance. Journal of Human Genetics, 56(1), 71–76. https://doi.org/10.1038/jhg.2010.151

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