blindness

Familial Exudative Vitreoretinopathy, EVR2

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

The basis for many of the ocular complications likely begins with incomplete development of the retinal vasculature.  Resulting retinal ischemia leads to neovascularization, vitreous hemorrhage and traction, and retinal folds, with some 20% going on to develop rhegmatogenous or traction detachments.  There is, however, considerable clinical variability, even within families, with some infants blind from birth whereas some (41%) adults have only areas of remaining avascularity or evidence of macular dragging.  In fact, some affected individuals are asymptomatic and diagnosed only as part of extensive family studies.  Intraretinal lipid is often seen.  Considerable asymmetry in the two eyes is common.  Secondary cataracts often occur and phthisis bulbi results in some patients.  The clinical picture is sometimes confused with retinopathy of prematurity.

Systemic Features: 

No consistent systemic abnormalities have been identified in EVR2.

Genetics

Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy is the name given to a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders caused by mutations in several genes.  Autosomal dominant (e.g., EVR1; 133780), and X-linked inheritance (this condition) have been reported with the former much more common. 

The X-linked form of FEVR (EVR2 described here) results from mutations in the NDP gene (Xp11.3) and is allelic to Norrie disease (310600).

Retinopathy of prematurity can be called a phenocopy of FEVR.

Pedigree: 
X-linked recessive, carrier mother
X-linked recessive, father affected
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Retinal, vitreal, and cataract surgery are indicated in appropriate cases.

References
Article Title: 

Familial Exudative Vitreoretinopathy, EVR4

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

The basis for many of the ocular complications likely begins with incomplete development of the retinal vasculature.  Resulting retinal ischemia leads to neovascularization, vitreous hemorrhage and traction, and retinal folds with some 20% going on to develop rhegmatogenous or traction detachments.  There is, however, considerable clinical variability, even within families, with some infants blind from birth whereas some (41%) adults have only areas of remaining avascularity or evidence of macular dragging.  In fact, some affected individuals are asymptomatic and diagnosed only as part of extensive family studies.  Intraretinal lipid is often seen.  Considerable asymmetry in the two eyes is common. Secondary cataracts often occur and phthisis bulbi results in some patients.  The clinical picture is sometimes confused with retinopathy of prematurity.

Systemic Features: 

Osteoporosis and endosteal hyperostosis has been reported among individuals with mutations in LRP5.

Genetics

The EVR4 form of FEVR results from mutations in the LRP5 gene (11q13.4) and the clinical features may be seen in both heterozygotes and homozygotes.  Thus the disease is inherited in both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive patterns.  The osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome (259770) is allelic to this condition.

Mutations in the FZD4 gene cause a phenotypically indistinguishable condition (EVR1; 133780) but is always inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern.  There is also an X-linked form (EVR2) caused by a mutation in NDP (305390).

Retinopathy of prematurity can be called a phenocopy of FEVR.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Autosomal recessive
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Retinal, vitreal, and cataract surgery are indicated in appropriate cases.

References
Article Title: 

Familial Exudative Vitreoretinopathy, EVR1

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

The basis for many of the ocular complications likely begins with incomplete development of the retinal vasculature.  Resulting retinal ischemia leads to neovascularization, vitreous hemorrhage and traction, and retinal folds, with some 20% going on to develop rhegmatogenous or traction detachments.  There is, however, considerable clinical variability, even within families, with some infants blind from birth whereas some (41%) adults have only areas of remaining avascularity or evidence of macular dragging.  In fact, some affected individuals are asymptomatic and diagnosed only as part of extensive family studies.  Intraretinal lipid is often seen.  Considerable asymmetry in the two eyes is common.  Secondary cataracts often occur and phthisis bulbi results in some patients.  The clinical picture is sometimes confused with retinopathy of prematurity.

Systemic Features: 

No systemic features have been associated with EVR1 disease.

Genetics

Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy is the name given to a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders caused by mutations in several genes.  Both autosomal dominant (EVR1 described here) plus EVR4 (601813) and X-linked inheritance (EVR2; 305390) have been reported with the former much more common.  Similarities in the clinical presentation of Congenital Nonattachment of the Retina may cause diagnotic confusion. 

Mutations in the frizzled-4 gene FZD4 (11q14-q21) have been associated with the EVR1 form of this disease inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern.  Retinopathy of prematurity can be called a phenocopy of FEVR.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal dominant
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Retinal, vitreal, and cataract surgery are indicated in appropriate cases.

References
Article Title: 

McCune-Albright Syndrome

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

This disorder is of interest to ophthalmologists because compression of the optic nerve can occur from fibrous dysplasia of the canal.  However, this occurs only in some cases.  The risk of optic neuropathy is higher in patients with elevated levels of growth hormone.

Systemic Features: 

This disorder is clinically heterogeneous because of the variable degree of involvement of all bony tissue.  The primary manifestations are secondary to endocrine dysfunction and fibrous dysplasia.  Thyrotoxicosis, Cushing syndrome, pituitary gigantism, hearing deficits, and precocious puberty (in both sexes) are common.  The skin often has a cafe-au-lait pattern of pigmentation.

Genetics

Postzygotic activating mutations in the GNAS gene on chromosome 20 (20q13.2) are likely responsible for this disorder although too few familial cases have been reported to document a mode of inheritance.  It has been suggested that an autosomal dominant lethal gene is involved with survival only in the presence of significant mosaicism.

Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Recent evidence suggests that early treatment (before age 18 years) in patients with elevated growth hormone levels using pharmacologic intervention, surgery, and/or radiotherapy is associated with less optic neuropathy compared with patients who are treated later.  The impact on hearing impairment is less certain and awaits further studies.

Not all patients have significant optic nerve compression. Decompression of the optic nerve canal is beneficial in about half of cases in which significant nerve encasement is present but should be performed only when progressive optic neuropathy occurs, especially when growth hormone levels are elevated.

References
Article Title: 

McCune-Albright syndrome

Dumitrescu CE, Collins MT. McCune-Albright syndrome. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2008 May 19;3:12.

PubMed ID: 
18489744

Oculocerebral Syndrome with Hypopigmentation

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Patients have severe ocular malformations which so far lack full characterization.  Nearly complete scleralization of the cornea prevents internal evaluation in most cases.  There may be extensive neovascularization of corneal clouding.  Anterior synechiae and cataracts have been described.  Other patients presumed to have the same disorder have normal fundi or diffuse pigmentary changes.  No limbal landmarks can be seen.  The central cornea can be more transparent but no iris can be visualized.  The eyes are microphthalmic as well.  Slow, wandering eye movements are constant.  Spastic ectropion of the lower lids is present. Lashes and eyebrows have minimal pigmentation and like the scalp hair have a slight yellowish tinge.  There is no response to bright light in severe cases whereas in other more mildly affected individuals presumed to have this disorder there is only hypoplasia of the fovea with diffuse retinal pigmentary changes.

Systemic Features: 

Individuals have severe mental retardation from birth and never respond to environmental cues beyond having a marked startle response to auditory stimuli.  Grasp and sucking responses persist at least into the second decade.  The developmental delay persists from birth and patients never achieve normal milestones.  Athetoid, writhing movements are prominent.  The limbs are spastic, and deep tendon reflexes are hyperactive. Contractures are common.  Hypodontia, diastema, and gingival hyperplasia are usually present and the hard palate is highly arched.  The skin is hypopigmented but pigmented nevi may be present and the distribution of melanocytes is uneven microscopically. Cerebellar hypoplasia has been reported in some patients.

Genetics

This is a presumed autosomal recessive disorder based on its familial occurrence and parental consanguinity in some families.  An interstitial deletion [del(3)(q27.1-1q29)] has been identified in the paternal chromosome of a 4-year-old female but the molecular defect remains unknown. 

Clinically heterogeneous cases from Africa, Germany, Italy, Great Britain, and Belgium may not all have the same disorder and evidence for a distinctive phenotype remains elusive.

Pedigree: 
Autosomal recessive
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

None available

References
Article Title: 

Oculocerebral syndrome with hypopigmentation (Cross

De Jong G, Fryns JP. Oculocerebral syndrome with hypopigmentation (Cross syndrome): the mixed pattern of hair pigmentation as an important diagnostic sign. Genet Couns. 1991;2(3):151-5.

PubMed ID: 
1801851

Choroideremia

Clinical Characteristics
Ocular Features: 

Choroideremia is characterized by a progressive atrophy of photoreceptors, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and choroid. Areas of RPE atrophy are present early in the mid-periphery and progress centrally.  This is associated with loss of photoreceptors and the choriocapillaris.

Night blindness is the first symptom often with onset during childhood. A ring-like perimacular scotoma develops that progresses into the periphery during life with corresponding visual field loss (peripheral constriction).  Symptoms and fundus changes are highly variable. Visual acuity is generally well maintained into later stages of the disease but some males are blind by age 30 years whereas others over the age of 50 are symptom-free.  An increased prevalence of myopia has been noted.

Males with choroideremia (and some females) have progressive loss of the choriocapillaris eventually baring the sclera beneath. Female carriers can exhibit patchy areas of RPE atrophy in the periphery and these may enlarge. Female carriers are typically not symptomatic, but there are reports of females being fully affected.  Females may also have visual field changes and defective dark adaptation.  OCT in young women shows dynamic changes and remodeling of the outer retina with time with focal retinal thickening, drusenlike deposits and disruptions in photoreceptor inner and outer segment junctions even in younger individuals.  The phenotype is more severe in older females as well suggesting that the retinal degeneration is progressive in both sexes.

Electroretinography (ERG) initially shows a decreased dark-adapted response with  intact light-adapted responses, indicating general dysfunction of rod photoreceptors. Cone dysfunction, however, develops with progression of the disease.

Systemic Features: 

No general systemic manifestations are associated with choroideremia. This may be explained by systemic expression of REP2, Rab escort protein-2, compensating for the decreased level of REP1.

There are occasional reports of associated deafness and obesity in some families with choroideremia (303110) but it is uncertain if this represents a unique disorder.

Genetics

Choroideremia is an X-linked recessive disorder affecting males and occasional female carriers.  The disorder is caused by mutations in the CHM gene on the X chromosome (Xq21.2) which leads to absence or truncation of the protein Rab escort protein-1 (REP1) that is part of Rab geranylgeranyltransferase, an enzyme complex involved in intracellular vesicular transport. A few patients with chromosomal translocations involving the relevant region of the X chromosome have been reported.

A homozygous mutation in the CYP4V2 gene has been reported to be responsible for a choroideremia-like clinical phenotype.

Pedigree: 
X-linked recessive, carrier mother
X-linked recessive, father affected
Treatment
Treatment Options: 

Visual function can be improved with low vision aids.  Recent early trials using adeno-associated viral vectors containing DNA coding for normal REP1 protein have documented improved rod and cone function with better visual acuity in affected males.

References
Article Title: 

CHANGES IN RETINAL SENSITIVITY AFTER GENE THERAPY IN CHOROIDEREMIA


Fischer MD, Ochakovski GA, Beier B, Seitz IP, Vaheb Y, Kortuem C, Reichel FFL, Kuehlewein L, Kahle NA, Peters T, Girach A, Zrenner E, Ueffing M, MacLaren RE, Bartz-Schmidt K, Wilhelm B. CHANGES IN RETINAL SENSITIVITY AFTER GENE THERAPY IN CHOROIDEREMIA. Retina. 2018 Oct 9. doi: 10.1097/IAE.0000000000002360. [Epub ahead of print].
 

PubMed ID: 
30308560

Clinical and Genetic Features of Choroideremia in Childhood

Khan KN, Islam F, Moore AT, Michaelides M. Clinical and Genetic Features of Choroideremia in Childhood. Ophthalmology. 2016 Aug 6. pii: S0161-6420(16)30583-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2016.06.051. [Epub ahead of print] PubMed.

PubMed ID: 
27506488

Optical

Jain N, Jia Y, Gao SS, Zhang X, Weleber RG, Huang D, Pennesi ME. Optical
Coherence Tomography Angiography in Choroideremia: Correlating Choriocapillaris
Loss With Overlying Degeneration
. JAMA Ophthalmol. 2016 May 5. doi:
10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2016.0874. [Epub ahead of print].

PubMed ID: 
27149258

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