Unilateral BEST1-Associated Retinopathy




Purpose


To describe a series of patients with molecularly confirmed mutation in BEST1 causing Best disease but with unilateral clinical manifestation.


Design


Retrospective observational case series.


Methods


Setting : Moorfields Eye Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital, London (United Kingdom). Patients : Five patients (10 eyes) with uniocular manifestation of BEST1 mutation causing Best disease were ascertained retrospectively from the clinical and genetic databases. Main Outcome Measures : Patients had full ophthalmologic examination, color fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence imaging, spectral-domain optical coherence tomography, and detailed electrophysiological assessment. Genetic testing was performed.


Results


All cases had a clinical appearance typical of and consistent with Best disease at various stages, except that the presentation was unilateral. The reduced electrooculogram light rise was bilateral and in the context of normal electroretinograms therefore indicates generalized dysfunction at the level of the retinal pigment epithelium.


Conclusions


Mutation in BEST1 has variable penetrance and expressivity, and can be uniocular. The clinical and electrophysiological features described assist targeted mutational screening and alert to the potential diagnosis even when there is an atypical unilateral presentation.


Best disease was first described by Adams in 1883, but was named after Dr Friedrich Best, who identified an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance after examining 7 members of a pedigree segregating this disorder. Best disease (vitelliform macular dystrophy) is an early-onset macular dystrophy typically characterized by bilateral accumulation of subretinal deposit resulting from heterozygous mutations in the BEST1 gene (OMIM 153700 ). It is a slowly progressive macular dystrophy with usual onset in childhood but sometimes in later teenage years. The classic appearance of yolk-like lesions is a striking feature and distinguishes it from other hereditary conditions. The phenotype can vary significantly, even within the same family. The most extreme example of this is nonpenetrance of the macular changes in the presence of electrophysiological evidence of disease. The retinal changes are typically bilateral and relatively symmetrical, but rarely, inherited BEST1 mutations may be associated with unilateral maculopathy, with only 3 cases reported in the literature to date. The present report describes a series of 5 molecularly proven cases with unilateral presentation of Best disease.


Methods


Patients were ascertained retrospectively from the clinical and genetic databases of Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, United Kingdom and Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, United Kingdom. Patients and family members received full ophthalmologic examination including visual acuity testing using Snellen charts, color fundus photography, fundus autofluorescence imaging, and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany). Electrophysiological assessment included full-field and pattern electroretinography and electrooculography. Blood samples were taken for DNA extraction and mutation screening of BEST1 by Sanger sequencing. The study was approved by the local ethics committee of Moorfields Eye Hospital. All patients, or their parents, gave informed consent and the study conformed to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and complied with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act.




Results


Family 1 (Cases 1 and 2)


A 12-year-old boy (Case 1, Table ) presented to the eye clinic with recent onset of blurred distance vision in the left eye. Best-corrected logMAR visual acuity was 0.02 in the right eye and 0.06 in the left. Near vision was N5 in each eye and no distortion was reported using an Amsler grid. There was a family history of macular dystrophy affecting his grandmother, who was registered blind, and his maternal uncle, who maintained driving vision. Funduscopy of the left eye showed a yolk-like elevated lesion at the central macula that was hyperautofluorescent on fundus autofluorescence imaging ( Figure 1 ). Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography revealed subretinal fluid in addition to the subretinal deposit. Fundus examination, fundus autofluorescence, and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography of the right eye were normal. His mother (Case 2, Table ) had similar uniocular features on funduscopy at the posterior pole of the right eye but was asymptomatic. Fundus autofluorescence showed bilateral, relatively symmetrical areas of increased autofluorescence in the nasal retina, but spectral-domain optical coherence tomography abnormality was present only at the right macula ( Figure 2 ). Electrophysiological testing showed absence of the electrooculogram light rise in both eyes of both mother and son. Full-field electroretinography was normal in both patients. Pattern electroretinograms were within normal limits in both eyes of the son, showing minimal interocular difference with lower amplitudes in the left eye using a 15-degree field stimulus. Pattern electroretinography was not performed in Case 2 (mother). In both patients, genetic testing identified a previously reported heterozygous sequence variant, c.692G>C, p.Ser231Thr, in BEST1 .



Table

Patient Characteristics and Demographic and Genetic Information for the 5 Patients With Unilateral BEST1 -Associated Retinopathy
































































Case Patient Age at Presentation (y) Sex Visual Acuity at Presentation (logMAR) in the Affected Eye Fundus Phenotype of the Affected Eye Fundus Phenotype of the Fellow Eye Electrooculography Light Rise Parental Presentation Disease-causing Mutation in the BEST1 Gene
1 12 Male 0.06 Creamy elevated lesion in central macular area Normal Absent light rise both eyes Mother carrier state, unilateral c.692G>C, p.Ser231Thr
2 (Mother of Case 1) 38 Female 0.0 Faint yellowish spot in the right fovea Normal Absent light rise both eyes Mother (grandmother of Case1) with bilateral macular dystrophy c.692G>C, p.Ser231Thr
3 16 Male −0.1 Macular atrophy with some yellow deposits at the level of the RPE Normal Reduced light rise both eyes Father with known Best disease, bilateral c.47C>T, p.Ser16Phe,
4 17 Female 0.06 Vitelliform lesion Normal Bilateral reduction Father carrier state, bilateral c.874G>A, p.Glu292Lys
5 27 Male Hand motions Atrophic lesion Normal Technically unsatisfactory Mother and sister affected, although family members not examined c.892T>G, p.Phe298Val

RPE = retinal pigment epithelium.



Figure 1


Multimodal imaging of (Left column) the right eye and (Right column) the left eye of patient (Case 1) with unilateral BEST1 -associated retinopathy. Color fundus photographs (Top row), infrared reflectance images (Second row), horizontal B-scans derived from spectral-domain optical coherence tomography through the foveal region (Third row), and fundus autofluorescence images (Bottom row) of both eyes are shown. The left eye presents with a typical yolk-like elevated lesion at the central macula that was hyperautofluorescent on fundus autofluorescence; spectral-domain optical coherence tomography revealed subretinal fluid in addition to the subretinal deposit.



Figure 2


Multimodal imaging of (Left column) the right eye and (Right column) the left eye of patient (Case 2; mother of patient in Case 1) with unilateral BEST1 -associated retinopathy. Color fundus photography (Top row), infrared reflectance imaging (Second row), horizontal B-scan through the foveal region by spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (Third row), and fundus autofluorescence (Bottom row) are presented. Subretinal deposit as detected by spectral-domain optical coherence tomography was present only in the right macula. Fundus autofluorescence showed bilateral, relatively symmetrical areas of increased autofluorescence in the nasal retina.


Case 3


A 16-year-old male subject presented with reduced vision in his right eye ( Table ). His father had been diagnosed with Best disease at an early age based on the presence of bilateral vitelliform lesions, but remained asymptomatic until the age of 30. Two paternal aunts were known to have Best disease. Best-corrected logMAR visual acuity was -0.1 in the right eye and 0.0 in the left. Funduscopy, fundus autofluorescence, and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography of the right eye revealed macular atrophy, yellow subretinal and subretinal pigment epithelium deposition, and subretinal fluid ( Figure 3 ). The left eye was normal on funduscopy and imaging. The pattern electroretinogram was significantly reduced in the right eye but normal in the left eye. Full-field electroretinograms were normal in both eyes. Electrooculogram light rise was subnormal in both eyes. BEST1 screening identified that both father and son were heterozygous for a previously reported sequence variant, c.47C>T, p.Ser16Phe, in exon 2 of BEST1 .




Figure 3


Multimodal imaging of (Left column) the right eye and (Right column) the left eye of patient (Case 3) with unilateral BEST1 -associated retinopathy. Infrared reflectance imaging (Top row), horizontal B-scan through the foveal region by spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (Middle row), and fundus autofluorescence (Bottom row) are shown. The right eye shows macular atrophy, yellow subretinal and subretinal pigment epithelium deposition, and subretinal fluid.


Case 4


A 17-year-old asymptomatic female patient was found by her optometrist to have an abnormal appearance of the right macula ( Table ). There was no known family history of eye disease. Best-corrected logMAR visual acuity was 0.06 in the right eye and 0.0 in the left. Fundus examination showed unilateral vitelliform changes in the right eye associated with increased autofluorescence on fundus autofluorescence and subretinal and subretinal pigment epithelium deposition on spectral-domain optical coherence tomography ( Figure 4 ). The left eye was normal on funduscopy and multimodal imaging. Her father was asymptomatic and funduscopy was normal. However, fundus autofluorescence imaging revealed hyperautofluorescent subretinal deposits in both eyes. Both father and daughter had significantly reduced electrooculogram light rise in both eyes, consistent with Best disease. In both the father and the daughter, BEST1 screening identified a previously reported heterozygous disease-causing mutation c.874G>A, p.Glu292Lys, in exon 8 of BEST1 .




Figure 4


Multimodal imaging of (Left column) the right eye and (Right column) the left eye of patient (Case 4) with unilateral BEST1 -associated retinopathy. Color fundus photographs (Top row), infrared reflectance images (Second row), horizontal B-scans derived from spectral-domain optical coherence tomography through the foveal region (Third row), and fundus autofluorescence images (Bottom row) of both eyes are presented. The right eye shows vitelliform changes associated with increased autofluorescence on fundus autofluorescence and subretinal and subretinal pigment epithelium deposition on spectral-domain optical coherence tomography.


Case 5


A 27-year-old male patient was reviewed with longstanding poor vision in the right eye ( Table ). Best-corrected logMAR visual acuity was hand movements in the right eye and 0.0 in the left. Fundus examination showed a macular scar in the right eye, but was normal on the left. Fundus autofluorescence imaging showed a large area of macular hypofluorescence and corresponding area of subretinal fibrosis on spectral-domain optical coherence tomography ( Figure 5 ). Full-field electroretinograms were normal bilaterally. Unfortunately, electrooculography was technically unsatisfactory on 2 occasions. His mother and sister were reported to be affected but family members were not available for examination. Genetic testing revealed a heterozygous previously reported variant in BEST1 , c.892T>G, p.Phe298Val. Other mutations of codon 298 have previously been reported.


Jan 5, 2017 | Posted by in OPHTHALMOLOGY | Comments Off on Unilateral BEST1-Associated Retinopathy

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access