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Phenotypic and Genetic Spectrum in 309 Consecutive Pediatric Patients with Inherited Retinal Disease. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Inherited retinal dystrophies (IRDs) are a significant cause of blindness or severe visual impairment in children, with varying symptoms and genetic associations.
  • The study analyzed data from 309 pediatric patients to determine the clinical and genetic profiles of IRDs, finding distinct patterns in preschoolers versus school-aged children.
  • Preschoolers exhibited symptoms like nystagmus and established genetic variants linked to isolated and syndromic forms of IRDs, while school-aged children largely showed declining visual acuity and a higher prevalence of cone-dominated diseases.

Article Abstract

Inherited retinal dystrophies (IRDs) are a common cause of blindness or severe visual impairment in children and may occur with or without systemic associations. The aim of the present study is to describe the phenotypic and genotypic spectrum of IRDs in a pediatric patient cohort in Retrospective single-center cross-sectional analysis. Presenting symptoms, clinical phenotype, and molecular genetic diagnosis were assessed in 309 pediatric patients with suspected IRD. Patients were grouped by age at genetic diagnosis (preschool: 0-6 years, n = 127; schoolchildren: 7-17 years, n = 182). Preschool children most frequently presented with nystagmus (34.5% isolated, 16.4% syndromic), no visual interest (20.9%; 14.5%), or nyctalopia (22.4%; 3.6%; < 0.05); schoolchildren most frequently presented with declining visual acuity (31% isolated, 21.1% syndromic), nyctalopia (10.6%; 13.5%), or high myopia (5.3%; 13.2%). Pathogenic variants were identified in 96 different genes (n = 69 preschool, n = 73 schoolchildren). In the preschool group, 57.4% had isolated and 42.6% had syndromic IRDs, compared to 70.9% and 29.1% in schoolchildren. In the preschool group, 32.4% of the isolated IRDs were related to forms of Leber's congenital amaurosis (most frequent were (11%) and (8.2%)), 31.5% were related to stationary IRDs, 15.1% were related to macular dystrophies (), and 8.2% to rod-cone dystrophies (). All rod-cone dystrophies (RCDs) were subjectively asymptomatic at the time of genetic diagnosis. At schoolage, 41% were attributed to cone-dominated disease (34% ), 10.3% to and 10.3% to RCDs (). Ciliopathies were the most common syndromic IRDs (preschool 37%; schoolchildren 45.1%), with variants in (5.6% each), , , and (3.7% each) being the most frequent in preschoolers, and (11.7%), (7.8%), , , and (3.9% each) being the most frequent in syndromic schoolkids. Vitreoretinal syndromic IRDs accounted for 29.6% (preschool: , , (5.6% each)) and 23.5% (schoolage: , (9.8% each)), metabolic IRDs for 9.4% () and 3.9% (), mitochondriopathies for 3.7% and 7.8%, and syndromic albinism accounted for 5.6% and 3.9%, respectively. In conclusion we show here that the genotypic spectrum of IRDs and its quantitative distribution not only differs between children and adults but also between children of different age groups, with an almost equal proportion of syndromic and non-syndromic IRDs in early childhood. Ophthalmic screening visits at the preschool and school ages may aid even presymptomatic diagnosis and treatment of potential sight and life-threatening systemic sequelae.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11595089PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms252212259DOI Listing

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