Clinical and genetic characteristics of 251 consecutive patients with macular and cone/cone-rod dystrophy

  • Johannes Birtel
  • Tobias Eisenberger
  • Martin Gliem
  • Philipp L Müller
  • Philipp Herrmann
  • Christian Betz
  • Diana Zahnleiter
  • Christine Neuhaus
  • Steffen Lenzner
  • Frank G Holz
  • Elisabeth Mangold
  • Hanno J Bolz
  • Peter Charbel Issa

Abstract

Macular and cone/cone-rod dystrophies (MD/CCRD) demonstrate a broad genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity, with retinal alterations solely or predominantly involving the central retina. Targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) is an efficient diagnostic tool for identifying mutations in patient with retinitis pigmentosa, which shows similar genetic heterogeneity. To detect the genetic causes of disease in patients with MD/CCRD, we implemented a two-tier procedure consisting of Sanger sequencing and targeted NGS including genes associated with clinically overlapping conditions. Disease-causing mutations were identified in 74% of 251 consecutive MD/CCRD patients (33% of the variants were novel). Mutations in ABCA4, PRPH2 and BEST1 accounted for 57% of disease cases. Further mutations were identified in CDHR1, GUCY2D, PROM1, CRX, GUCA1A, CERKL, MT-TL1, KIF11, RP1L1, MERTK, RDH5, CDH3, C1QTNF5, CRB1, JAG1, DRAM2, POC1B, NPHP1 and RPGR. We provide detailed illustrations of rare phenotypes, including autofluorescence and optical coherence tomography imaging. Targeted NGS also identified six potential novel genotype-phenotype correlations for FAM161A, INPP5E, MERTK, FBLN5, SEMA4A and IMPDH1. Clinical reassessment of genetically unsolved patients revealed subgroups with similar retinal phenotype, indicating a common molecular disease cause in each subgroup.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 19.03.2018
PubMed 29555955