Purpose: To examine the genetic and clinical features and the natural history of RBP3-associated retinopathy.
Design: Multi-center international, retrospective, case series of adults and children, with moleculraly confirmed RBP3-asociated retinopathy.
Methods: The genetic, clinical, and retinal imaging findings, including optical coherence tomography (OCT) and fundus autofluorescence (FAF), were investigated both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. The results of international standard full-field electroretinography (ERG) and pattern electroretinography (PERG) were reviewed.
Results: We ascertained 12 patients (5 female and 7 male) from 10 families (4 patients previously reported). Ten novel disease-causing RBP3 variants were identified. Ten patients were homozygous. The mean age (±SD, range) of the group was 21.4 years (±19.1, 2.9-60.5 years) at baseline evaluation. All 12 patients were highly myopic, with a mean spherical equivalent of -16.0D (range, -7.0D to -33.0D). Visual acuity was not significantly different between eyes, and no significant anisometropia was observed. Mean best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was 0.48 logMAR (SD, ±0.29; range, 0.2-1.35 logMAR); at baseline. Eleven patients had longitudinal BCVA assessment, with a mean BCVA of 0.46 logMAR after a mean follow-up of 12.6 years. All patients were symptomatic with reduced VA and myopia by the age of 7 years old. All patients had myopic fundi and features in keeping with high myopia on OCT, including choroidal thinning. The 4 youngest patients had no fundus pigmentary changes, with the rest of the patients presenting with a variable degree of mid-peripheral pigmentation and macular changes. FAF showed variable phenotypes, ranging from areas of increased signal to advanced atrophy in older patients. OCT showed cystoid macular edema at presentation in 3 patients, which persisted during follow-up in 2 patients and resolved to atrophy in the third patient. The ERGs were abnormal in 9 of 9 cases, revealing variable relative involvement of rod and cone photoreceptors with additional milder dysfunction post-phototransduction in some. All but 1 patient had PERG evidence of macular dysfunction, which was severe in most cases.
Conclusions: This study details the clinical and functional phenotype of RBP3-retinopathy in the largest cohort reported to date. RBP3-retinopathy is a disease characterized by early onset, slow progression over decades, and high myopia. The phenotypic spectrum and natural history as described herein has prognostic and counseling implications. RBP3-related disease should be considered in children with high myopia and retinal dystrophy.
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.