학술논문

Expanding the clinical phenotype in patients with disease causing variants associated with atypical Usher syndrome
Document Type
article
Source
Ophthalmic Genetics. 42(6)
Subject
Clinical Research
Genetics
Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision
Neurosciences
Neurodegenerative
Pediatric
Orphan Drug
Rare Diseases
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Eye
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Arylsulfatases
Autoantigens
Cell Cycle Proteins
Codon
Nonsense
Cone-Rod Dystrophies
Female
Frameshift Mutation
Genetic Testing
Hearing Loss
Sensorineural
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Monoacylglycerol Lipases
Multimodal Imaging
Phenotype
Retinal Pigment Epithelium
Retrospective Studies
Tomography
Optical Coherence
Usher Syndromes
Visual Acuity
Young Adult
Atypical usher syndrome
CEP78
cep250
ARSG
ABHD12
Opthalmology and Optometry
Ophthalmology & Optometry
Language
Abstract
Atypical Usher syndrome (USH) is poorly defined with a broad clinical spectrum. Here, we characterize the clinical phenotype of disease caused by variants in CEP78, CEP250, ARSG, and ABHD12.Chart review evaluating demographic, clinical, imaging, and genetic findings of 19 patients from 18 families with a clinical diagnosis of retinal disease and confirmed disease-causing variants in CEP78, CEP250, ARSG, or ABHD12.CEP78-related disease included sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in 6/7 patients and demonstrated a broad phenotypic spectrum including: vascular attenuation, pallor of the optic disc, intraretinal pigment, retinal pigment epithelium mottling, areas of mid-peripheral hypo-autofluorescence, outer retinal atrophy, mild pigmentary changes in the macula, foveal hypo-autofluorescence, and granularity of the ellipsoid zone. Nonsense and frameshift variants in CEP250 showed mild retinal disease with progressive, non-congenital SNHL. ARSG variants resulted in a characteristic pericentral pattern of hypo-autofluorescence with one patient reporting non-congenital SNHL. ABHD12-related disease showed rod-cone dystrophy with macular involvement, early and severe decreased best corrected visual acuity, and non-congenital SNHL ranging from unreported to severe.This study serves to expand the clinical phenotypes of atypical USH. Given the variable findings, atypical USH should be considered in patients with peripheral and macular retinal disease even without the typical RP phenotype especially when SNHL is noted. Additionally, genetic screening may be useful in patients who have clinical symptoms and retinal findings even in the absence of known SNHL given the variability of atypical USH.