PURPOSE: To report a case of adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy in a patient who was found to have a previously unreported variant of the IMPG2 gene. METHODS: Case report. RESULTS: A 65-year-old white woman with no significant medical or ocular history presented with a complaint of persistent wavy vision for 10 months. On funduscopic examination, bilateral vitelliform lesions of approximately 1 mm in the right eye and 0.5 mm in the left eye were evident, with no choroidal neovascularization in either eye. The patient was diagnosed with adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy. Genetic testing revealed a single likely pathogenic variant of the IMPG2 gene that may explain the examination findings. CONCLUSION: Adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy is a common and relatively benign condition occurring in approximately 1 in 8,000 individuals. Although vitelliform lesions can be a manifestation of systemic diseases or be idiopathic, in a minority of patients, genetic predisposition may play a role. Mutations in four particular genes BEST1, PRPH2, IMPG1, and IMPG2 have been associated with some cases of adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy, with this particular gene variant of IMPG2 being previously unreported.
PURPOSE: To report a case of adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy in a patient who was found to have a previously unreported variant of the IMPG2 gene. METHODS: Case report. RESULTS: A 65-year-old white woman with no significant medical or ocular history presented with a complaint of persistent wavy vision for 10 months. On funduscopic examination, bilateral vitelliform lesions of approximately 1 mm in the right eye and 0.5 mm in the left eye were evident, with no choroidal neovascularization in either eye. The patient was diagnosed with adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy. Genetic testing revealed a single likely pathogenic variant of the IMPG2 gene that may explain the examination findings. CONCLUSION: Adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy is a common and relatively benign condition occurring in approximately 1 in 8,000 individuals. Although vitelliform lesions can be a manifestation of systemic diseases or be idiopathic, in a minority of patients, genetic predisposition may play a role. Mutations in four particular genes BEST1, PRPH2, IMPG1, and IMPG2 have been associated with some cases of adult-onset vitelliform macular dystrophy, with this particular gene variant of IMPG2 being previously unreported.
Authors: Irene Vázquez-Domínguez; Catherina H Z Li; Zeinab Fadaie; Lonneke Haer-Wigman; Frans P M Cremers; Alejandro Garanto; Carel B Hoyng; Susanne Roosing Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci Date: 2022-05-02 Impact factor: 4.925