| Literature DB >> 29340169 |
Aristófanes Mendonça Canamary1, Walter Yukihiko Takahashi2, Juliana Maria Ferraz Sallum1.
Abstract
Autoimmune retinopathy (AIR) is a rare and still poorly understood immune-mediated disease that may cause inflammation from circulating autoantibodies against the retina. It may be related to history of autoimmune disease in the patient or in a family member or the presence of neoplastic disease in the individual. The disease may be subdivided into paraneoplastic and non-paraneoplastic AIR. When related to melanoma, it is referred to as MAR, and when related to other cancers, it is called CAR. The exact prevalence of AIR is unknown. It mainly affects older adults. Patients present with bilateral and asymmetric scotomas, photopsias, visual field defects, with rapidly progressive visual loss in late onset. In the initial stage, fundus examination is unremarkable, and in late stages, there is limited retinal epitheliopathy and vascular attenuation, with or without optic disc pallor, associated or not with intraocular inflammation and with no evidence of degenerative retinal disease. A clinical investigation with detailed anamnesis and laboratory tests should be performed to search for an associated neoplasm. Ophthalmologic and complementary examinations such as full-field electroretinogram, optical coherence tomography, visual field and fundus autofluorescence, help the diagnosis. Blood tests to search for autoantibodies should be requested. Management consists of prolonged immunosuppression, which may be combined with antioxidant vitamins. In general, the prognosis is uncertain, so the disease still needs to be better understood. More studies should be performed to improve diagnostic measures and define specific management that could preserve or even restore vision.Entities:
Keywords: Autoantibodies; Immunosuppression; Recoverin; Retinal cone photoreceptor cells; Rod cell outer segment
Year: 2018 PMID: 29340169 PMCID: PMC5759752 DOI: 10.1186/s40942-017-0104-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Retina Vitreous ISSN: 2056-9920
Types of autoimmune retinopathy
| Type of autoimmune retinopathy | Associated conditions |
|---|---|
| Non-paraneoplastic | Not related to cancer |
| Paraneoplastic | CAR, MAR, viteliform maculopathy, bilateral diffuse uveal melanocytic proliferation |
Autoimmune retinopathy and related cell dysfunction
| Autoimmune retinopathy | Cell dysfunction |
|---|---|
| Non-paraneoplastic | Cones or rods or both |
|
| |
| CAR | Cones and rods |
| MAR | Rods, antibodies against bipolar cells |
CAR cancer-associated retinopathy, MAR melanoma-associated retinopathy
Retinal cell dysfunction and associated symptoms
| Retinal cell dysfunction | Symptoms |
|---|---|
| Cones | Photopsia, photosensitivity, hemeralopia, loss of color vision, diminished vision acuity, diminished central vision |
| Rods | Photopsia, nyctalopia, prolonged dark adaptation, peripheral vision field loss |
Fig. 1Color fundus. Shows normal appearance of optic disc and macula. Also pigmentary changes in mid-periphery and discrete vascular (arteries) attenuation. A 56-year-old male started to notice 3 years ago, rapid progressive visual field loss and nyctalopia without any other local or systemic symptoms. There were no signs of ocular inflammation and no history of autoimmune diseases or cancer. Blood tests showed some antiretinal antibodies. Fluorescein angiography (FA) showed areas of leakage. Full-field ERG demonstrated non-detectable rod response in both eyes and preserved response of cones in 7% in both eyes. No gene mutation was found in retinal dystrophy panel. Patient noticed some visual improvement with high doses of immunosuppressive drugs
Fig. 2Fundus auto fluorescence. Areas of hypo- and hyperautofluorescence in mid-periphery in both eyes
Fig. 3Optical coherence tomography. Images shows loss of ellipsoid zone and photoreceptors in both eyes
Main antibodies against retinal proteins associated with AIR
| Retinal proteins | Main antibodies |
|---|---|
| Antibodies | Anti-recoverin, anti-alpha-enolase, anti-transducin, anti-CAII, anti-arrestin, anti-rhodopsin, anti-Muller glial cells, anti-mitofilin, anti-tintin, anti-COX |
COX cytochrome c oxidase, CAII carbonic anhydrase II
Fig. 4Visual field. Progression of visual field loss at the first examination (A.1, B.1), after 6 (A.2, B.2), 8 (A.3, A.3) and 22 (A.4, B.4) months follow-up in both eyes in a patient with high suspicion of autoimmune retinopathy