When fever becomes a trigger
Febrile seizures (seizures brought on by fever) affect about 2–5% of young children and are usually harmless, one-time events. But for a smaller group, fever seems to act as a reliable trigger for more serious, recurring epilepsy. These children have a condition where the brain's electrical system is unusually sensitive to temperature changes.
Managing this type of epilepsy is difficult. Many children do not respond to standard seizure medications. Some are given drugs that, for certain genetic mutations, can actually make things worse. Without knowing the underlying cause, doctors often proceed by trial and error — an exhausting and sometimes harmful process for families.
The old approach and its limits
For years, children with fever-triggered epilepsy received a clinical diagnosis based on symptoms alone. If they had frequent, severe seizures starting in infancy, they might be diagnosed with Dravet syndrome. Others received more general diagnoses.
But here's the twist: two children with identical-looking seizures may have completely different genetic causes — and completely different responses to treatment.
The genes behind the storm
Think of the brain's electrical system like a network of switches. Certain genes act as the instructions for building those switches. When a gene mutation causes a switch to malfunction, the circuit becomes unstable and prone to firing uncontrollably — especially when fever raises the body's temperature, acting like a power surge.
Different gene mutations affect different types of switches. The SCN1A gene, for example, encodes a sodium channel — a gateway that controls electrical signals in nerve cells. When SCN1A is faulty, a class of seizure medications called sodium channel blockers can make seizures worse by further disrupting already impaired channels. Knowing the mutation lets doctors avoid that trap.
Inside the study
This retrospective study examined 61 children with fever-related epilepsy treated at Wuxi Children's Hospital in China between 2016 and 2023. All underwent whole exome sequencing (WES) — a genetic test that reads nearly all the protein-coding regions of DNA. Thirty children (49%) tested positive for a disease-causing mutation. Researchers compared the clinical features and treatment outcomes of the gene-positive and gene-negative groups.
Among the 30 gene-positive children, mutations in SCN1A were most common (13 cases), followed by PCDH19 (4 cases), ADGRV1 (3 cases), and CACNB4 (2 cases). One entirely new mutation was identified — a potential first-in-the-world genetic discovery related to this type of epilepsy.
Most gene-positive children had early onset: 20 of 30 showed their first seizure within the first year of life. More than half had developmental delays, suggesting the genetic problem affected brain development broadly, not just seizure control.
Knowing the mutation type changed the picture significantly — gene-positive children had earlier onset and different treatment responses than those without an identified mutation.
Why the mutation type matters for treatment
Children in the "effective treatment" group — those whose seizures were better controlled — differed from those in the "ineffective" group in three key ways: the specific gene mutation involved, the classification severity of that mutation, and whether seizures began in the first year of life.
This means a child's genetic profile may serve as a roadmap. For families stuck in cycles of failed medications, genetic testing could point toward targeted treatment options — or at minimum, help doctors avoid medications known to be harmful for specific mutations.
If your child has recurring seizures triggered by fever, especially beginning in infancy, ask your neurologist about genetic testing. Whole exome sequencing is increasingly available and covered by insurance in many cases. This research is not a clinical guideline yet, but the evidence strongly supports genetic workup as part of the standard evaluation for this type of epilepsy.
This study included only 30 gene-positive patients at a single hospital in China. The sample is small, and the findings may not translate perfectly to children in other populations or healthcare settings. The retrospective design also means the data was collected from records rather than a controlled forward-looking study, which introduces potential bias.
Larger, multicenter genetic studies of fever-triggered epilepsy are needed to build a more complete map of which mutations lead to which outcomes. As genetic databases grow and testing becomes cheaper, the goal is to reach a point where a newborn diagnosed with this condition can receive a genetic-guided treatment plan from day one — reducing the painful years of trial and error that too many families currently endure.