What is the expected progression of an SCN2A-related disorder?
SCN2A-related disorders can look very different from one child to another. Some children have early-onset seizures and developmental delays, while others may have milder symptoms that become clearer over time. For many families, the course unfolds gradually, with periods of stability and periods where new needs emerge. Your child’s neurologist can help you understand what has been seen in children with similar symptoms or genetic changes, while recognizing that your child’s individual path may not follow a predictable pattern.
What symptoms should we monitor of an SCN2A-related disorder?
Families are often asked to keep an eye on seizure activity (including changes in frequency, type, or triggers), development (such as communication, learning, or motor skills), and changes in muscle tone, coordination, or movement. Some children may also experience feeding challenges, sleep difficulties, or sensory sensitivities. Tracking changes over time—what’s improving, what’s staying the same, and what feels new—can help your care team adjust treatment and support as needed.
What treatments or therapies are available for SCN2A-related disorders?
Treatment is typically focused on managing symptoms and supporting development. This may include anti-seizure medications, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech or feeding therapy, and educational supports. There are targeted and precision-based treatments in development. Your care team can help you understand which therapies are most appropriate now, and how those may change as your child grows.
Who else should be on our care team for an SCN2A-related disorder?
Many rare neurogenetic disorders affect multiple body systems. Children with SCN2A-related disorders may benefit from care beyond neurology, including developmental pediatrics, physical medicine and rehabilitation, gastroenterology (feeding or reflux concerns), orthopedics (tone or mobility differences), or speech and feeding specialists. Ask your doctor which specialists should be part of your child's care. Geneticists, doctors who specialize in genetic disorders, are often very good at managing care for patients with complex rare diseases.
For questions specific to your child’s situation, Citizen Health offers a free doctor’s appointment preparation tool that incorporates your child’s medical records and provides appointment preparation suggestions through an AI chat interface.
Finding clinical trial opportunities & supporting research into SCN2A-related disorders
When you participate in research, you help your child and other families in the future. Medical research studies can be very different from each other. Some test new treatments, while others are "natural history studies" that just collect information about a disease’s impact over time.
Clinical trials are research studies that help doctors find new treatments. Some trials test new medicines or therapies that aren't available yet. Even if you may choose not to participate, it can be good to know what options exist for your child's condition. Your child's doctor or disease organization can help you find trials that might be a good fit. The U.S. government also maintains a registry at clinicaltrials.gov
Natural history studies are designed to help researchers learn more about the condition. This information is important for creating future treatments. Traditional natural history studies can involve additional medical appointments over the course of several years.
Patient registries collect health information from people with specific diseases to help research move faster and connect families with clinical trials. Registries also show researchers and drug companies that families are engaged and want to help develop new treatments, which can bring more funding and research attention to a disease. Some diseases have more than one registry you can join. Patient Advocacy Groups typically establish and maintain patient registries for specific rare disorders. (See Section 5 below to learn more).
Organizing and maintaining your child’s medical records for SCN2A-related disorders
SCN2A-related disorder patients see many different doctors, often across different medical and technological systems that may not talk to each other. Unfortunately, that means the burden often falls on caregivers to track care holistically, identify “gaps,” and make sure nothing gets missed. Keeping your records as organized and centralized as you can from early on is likely to improve your ability to manage your child’s care down the road.
You can start by creating a one-page sheet with your child's diagnosis, current medications, allergies, and emergency contacts. Bring this sheet to every appointment. It can really help in emergencies or when you see a new doctor.
Many caregivers establish one (or several) binders (s) in which they keep track of appointments, medication updates, symptoms, and other ongoing medically relevant information.
We also encourage caregivers to consider Citizen Health’s free tools for centralizing, managing, accessing, and extracting key information from health records. Our system will collect all your health records, across doctors and health systems, making them available on our secure online platform that can provide answers in real time based on questions you ask (like “What medications has my child been prescribed in the past year?” or “When did we last see an orthopedist?”)
As a company built by SCN2A-related disorder caregivers, we aim to overcome the need for physical binders. But ultimately, the important question is what works for you and your family.