| Literature DB >> 31766479 |
Ana Fakin1, Maja Šuštar1, Jelka Brecelj1, Crystel Bonnet2,3,4,5,6, Christine Petit2,3,4,5,6,7, Andrej Zupan8, Damjan Glavač8, Martina Jarc-Vidmar1, Saba Battelino9,10, Marko Hawlina1.
Abstract
USH2A mutation is the most common cause of retinitis pigmentosa, with or without hearing impairment. Patients most commonly exhibit hyperautofluorescent ring on fundus autofluorescence imaging (FAF) and rod-cone dystrophy on electrophysiology. A detailed study of three USH2A patients with a rare pattern of double hyperautofluorescent rings was performed. Twenty-four patients with typical single hyperautofluorescent rings were used for comparison of the ages of onset, visual fields, optical coherence tomography, electrophysiology, and audiograms. Double rings delineated the area of pericentral retinal degeneration in all cases. Two patients exhibited rod-cone dystrophy, whereas the third had a cone-rod dystrophy type of dysfunction on electrophysiology. There was minimal progression on follow-up in all three. Patients with double rings had significantly better visual acuity, cone function, and auditory performance than the single ring group. Double rings were associated with combinations of null and missense mutations, none of the latter found in the single ring patients. According to these findings, the double hyperautofluorescent rings indicate a mild subtype of USH2A disease, characterized by pericentral retinal degeneration, mild to moderate hearing loss, and either a rod-cone or cone-rod pattern on electrophysiology, the latter expanding the known clinical spectrum of USH2A-retinopathy.Entities:
Keywords: USH2A; cone-rod dystrophy; double hyperautofluorescent rings; electrophysiology; fundus autofluorescence; retinitis pigmentosa; usher syndrome
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31766479 PMCID: PMC6947471 DOI: 10.3390/genes10120956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Clinical and genetic characteristics of USH2A patients exhibiting double hyperautofluorescent rings.
| ID | Sex | Age (Years) | Onset (Years) | BCVA; R, L | ERG | Hearing Loss # (dB); R, L (Age) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | p.Trp3955Ter, p.Arg303His | M | 42 | 18 | 1.0, 1.0 | rod-cone dystrophy | 56, 45 (41) |
| 2 | p.Cys870Ter, p.Arg303His | F | 52 | 22 | 0.8, 0.9 | rod-cone dystrophy | 34, 36 (46) |
| 3 | p.Trp3955Ter, p.Gly4032Arg | F | 61 | 58 | 1.0, 1.0 | cone-rod dystrophy | 31, 40 (65) |
BCVA = best corrected visual acuity, R = right, L = left, # = average hearing loss across the 500, 1000, 2000 and 4000 Hz (Normal = < 20 dB).
Figure 1Goldmann visual field (first row) fundus autofluorescence (second row) and full-field ERG (bottom row) of three USH2A patients with double hyperautofluorescent rings. Goldmann perimetry was performed using II/1 and II/4 targets. The arcuate yellow lines mark the 15° radius on Goldmann visual fields and FAF images. RE = right eye, LE = left eye. The figures (A) and (B) mark the approximate location of scotoma associated with “typical” and “pericentral” RP according to Sandberg et al. [9]. Patients 1 and 2 had absent rod responses and residual cone responses in keeping with the diagnosis of RP. Patient 3 had a mild reduction of the rod (DA 0.01 ERG) and cone (LA 3 ERG and LA 30 Hz flicker) specific responses in a cone-rod dysfunction pattern. The first column shows ERG responses of a representative healthy control.
Figure 2The ERG amplitudes in relation to the age of USH2A patients with double and single hyperautofluorescent rings. Filled circle = double ring, empty circle = single ring, LA = light-adapted, DA = dark-adapted. Dashed lines represent the 95% confidence intervals of the single ring group. Green area marks the normal amplitudes according to the laboratory normative. Note the good rod function in Patient 3, atypical for RP.
Figure 3FAF, OCT and overlaid microperimetry of Patient 1. Retinal sensitivity is color-coded from green (good) to red (poor), with empty squares representing no response to the brightest stimuli. The location of each OCT scan is marked with green lines. The areas of transition trough the hyperautofluorescent borders are marked with blue lines and enlarged in rectangles a and b. The outer hyperautofluorescent ring was most accessible to the OCT imaging in the inferior retina. Panel b shows the re-appearance of the external limiting membrane at the location of the outer ring.
Figure 4FAF, OCT, and overlaid microperimetry of Patient 3. Note the incomplete double ring pattern in the right eye. Retinal sensitivity is color-coded from green (good) to red (poor), with empty squares representing no response to the brightest stimuli. The location of each OCT scan is marked with green lines. The areas of transition trough the hyperautofluorescent borders are marked with blue lines and enlarged in rectangles a–c. The outer hyperautofluorescent ring was best accessible to OCT imaging in the inferior retina. Panel c shows the re-appearance of the external limiting membrane at the inner (macula-facing) border of the ring, followed by the re-appearance of inner segment ellipsoid at the outer (periphery-facing) border of the ring. Note the blood vessel on the LE FAF (dark line) as well as the panel c OCT image (hyperreflective vertical line in the inner retina), spatially corresponding with the inner border of the ring.
Figure 5Snellen visual acuity and hearing loss in relation to the age of USH2A patients with double and single hyperautofluorescent rings. Filled circle = double ring, empty circle = single ring. Dashed lines represent the 95% confidence intervals of the single ring group. Green area marks the lower limit of normal hearing (20 dB hearing loss).
Figure 6Fundus autofluorescence of Patient 3 at presentation (top) and after five years of follow-up (bottom).
Summary of the clinical and genetic characteristics of the comparator group of USH2A patients exhibiting single hyperautofluorescent rings (comparator group).
| N | Sex | Age (Years) | Onset (Years) | BCVA | ERG | Hearing Loss # (dB) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24 | 75% (18/24) null + null; 25% (6/24) null + missense | 12 M, 12 F | median 45, range 19–70 | median 19, range 6–42 | median 0.6, range 0.1–1.0 | rod-cone dystrophy in 8/8 performed, at the median age of 27 y | Median 64 dB, range 51–111 dB) in 21 performed, at the median age of 42 y * |
N = number of patients. M = male F = female BCVA = best corrected visual acuity # = average hearing loss across the 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz (Normal = < 20 dB). * The audiogram was performed in 21 patients however all 24 patients reported congenital hearing loss. The average values between the right and left eye or ear were used.