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Review
. 2025 Feb;66(2):328-340.
doi: 10.1111/epi.18187. Epub 2024 Nov 19.

WONOEP appraisal: Targeted therapy development for early onset epilepsies

Affiliations
Review

WONOEP appraisal: Targeted therapy development for early onset epilepsies

Pablo M Casillas-Espinosa et al. Epilepsia. 2025 Feb.

Abstract

The early onset epilepsies encompass a heterogeneous group of disorders, some of which result in drug-resistant seizures, developmental delay, psychiatric comorbidities, and sudden death. Advancement in the widespread use of targeted gene panels as well as genome and exome sequencing has facilitated the identification of different causative genes in a subset of these patients. The ability to recognize the genetic basis of early onset epilepsies continues to improve, with de novo coding variants accounting for most of the genetic etiologies identified. Although current disease-specific and disease-modifying therapies remain limited, novel precision medicine approaches, such as small molecules, cell therapy, and other forms of genetic therapies for early onset epilepsies, have created excitement among researchers, clinicians, and caregivers. Here, we summarize the main findings of presentations and discussions on novel therapeutic strategies for targeted treatment of early onset epilepsies that occurred during the Workshop on Neurobiology of Epilepsy (WONOEP XVI, Talloires, France, July 2022). The presentations discussed the use of chloride transporter inhibitors for neonatal seizures, targeting orexinergic signaling for childhood absence epilepsy, targeting energy metabolism in Dravet syndrome, and the role of cannabinoid receptor type 2, reversible acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, cell therapies, and RNA-based therapies in early life epilepsies.

Keywords: acetylcholinesterase; bumetanide; cannabidiol; cannabinoid receptor type 2; developmental and epileptic encephalopathies; interneuron; miRNA; orexin.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure of Conflict of Interest

DCH and RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences reports the European Patent Application No. EP21198390.3 “Modulation of microRNA- 335-5p for the treatment of sodium channelopathies.

Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest:

Outside the submitted work, PMCE has received research grants from CSIRO, Data61, Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Praxis, Eisai and Kaoskey. PMCE declares no conflict of interest with the current work. DCH and RCSI have filed a patent application based on modifying miR-335 to treat seizure-related disorders. ASG is the Editor-in-Chief of Epilepsia Open, associate editor of Neurobiology of Disease, and receives royalties from Elsevier (publications, journal editorial board participation), Wolters Kluwer and Medlink (publications). MM, no conflict of interest. OA, no conflict of interest. NCY, no conflict of interest.

SA is the Deputy Editor for Epilepsia. He has served as a consultant or received honoraria for lectures from Angelini Pharma, Biocodex, Biomarin, Encoded, Eisai, GRINtherapeutics, Jazz Pharmaceutics, Neuraxpharm, Nutricia, Orion, UCB Pharma, Xenon, Zogenix. He has been an investigator for clinical trials for Eisai, Marinus, Proveca, UCB Pharma, Xenon and Zogenix.

RS has served as a consultant and/or speaker for which he has received honoraria from Biocodex, Eisai, BioMarin, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Neurelis, Ovid, SK Life Science, UCB Pharma and Zogenix.

TOB’s institution has received research funding from Eisai, UCB Pharma, LivaNova, ES Therapeutics and Kinoxis Therapeutics. He has also received competitive grant funding from the NHMRC, MRFF, NINDS and the DoD.

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