Abstract

Treatment trials require sound knowledge on the natural course of disease. To assess clinical features, genetic findings, and genotype-phenotype correlations in patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) associated with biallelic sequence variations in the PDE6A gene in preparation for a gene supplementation trial. This prospective, longitudinal, observational cohort study was conducted from January 2001 to December 2019 in a single center (Centre for Ophthalmology of the University of Tübingen, Germany) with patients recruited multinationally from 12 collaborating European tertiary referral centers. Patients with retinitis pigmentosa, sequence variants in PDE6A, and the ability to provide informed consent were included. Comprehensive ophthalmological examinations; validation of compound heterozygosity and biallelism by familial segregation analysis, allelic cloning, or assessment of next-generation sequencing-read data, where possible. Genetic findings and clinical features describing the entire cohort and comparing patients harboring the 2 most common disease-causing variants in a homozygous state (c.304C>A;p.(R102S) and c.998 + 1G>A;p.?). Fifty-seven patients (32 female patients [56%]; mean [SD], 40 [14] years) from 44 families were included. All patients completed the study. Thirty patients were homozygous for disease-causing alleles. Twenty-seven patients were heterozygous for 2 different PDE6A variants each. The most frequently observed alleles were c.304C>A;p.(R102S), c.998 + 1G>A;p.?, and c.2053G>A;p.(V685M). The mean (SD) best-corrected visual acuity was 0.43 (0.48) logMAR (Snellen equivalent, 20/50). The median visual field area with object III4e was 660 square degrees (5th and 95th percentiles, 76 and 11 019 square degrees; 25th and 75th percentiles, 255 and 3923 square degrees). Dark-adapted and light-adapted full-field electroretinography showed no responses in 88 of 108 eyes (81.5%). Sixty-nine of 108 eyes (62.9%) showed additional findings on optical coherence tomography imaging (eg, cystoid macular edema or macular atrophy). The variant c.998 + 1G>A;p.? led to a more severe phenotype when compared with the variant c.304C>A;p.(R102S). Seventeen of the PDE6A variants found in these patients appeared to be novel. Regarding the clinical findings, disease was highly symmetrical between the right and left eyes and visual impairment was mild or moderate in 90% of patients, providing a window of opportunity for gene therapy.

Highlights

  • Meaning These data suggest that PDE6A–retinitis pigmentosa may be amenable to gene therapy

  • We examined 57 patients from across Europe with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) associated with pathogenic, biallelic variants in the PDE6A gene

  • We observed and described the genetic and ophthalmologic characteristics in 57 patients with RP associated with pathogenic biallelic variants in the PDE6A gene

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Summary

OBJECTIVE

Genetic findings, and genotype-phenotype correlations in patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) associated with biallelic sequence variations in the PDE6A gene in preparation for a gene supplementation trial. Biallelic sequence variations in the PDE6A gene have been identified to cause autosomal recessive progressive retinal atrophy in the Cardigan Welsh Corgi dog.[9,10] induced and natural mouse models have been studied for variations of the disease phenotype (eg, pace of photoreceptor degeneration) associated with different PDE6A sequence variations.[10,11] In preclinical gene supplementation trials, mice showed more effective photoreceptor cell rescue when the rod-specific transgene AAV2/8(Y733F)Rho-Pde6α was delivered before the onset of disease. The aim of the present study was to assess clinical features and genetic findings of patients with RP associated with biallelic sequence variations in the PDE6A gene in preparation for this gene supplementation trial

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