Abstract

PurposeStargardt macular dystrophy (STGD) results in early central vision loss. We sought to explain the genetic cause of STGD in a cohort of 88 patients from three different cultural backgrounds.MethodsNext Generation Sequencing using a novel capture panel was used to search for disease causing mutations. Unsolved patients were clinically re-examined and tested for copy number variations (CNVs) as well as intronic mutations.ResultsWe determined the cause of disease in 67% of our patients. Our analysis identified 35 novel ABCA4 alleles. Eleven patients had mutations in genes not previously reported to cause STGD. Finally, 45% of our unsolved patients had single deleterious mutations in ABCA4, a recessive disease gene. No likely pathogenic CNVs were identified.ConclusionsThis study expands our knowledge of STGD by identifying dozens of novel STGD causing alleles. The frequency of patients with single mutations in ABCA4 is higher than controls, indicating these mutations contribute to disease. Eleven patients were explained by mutations outside ABCA4 underlining the need to genotype all retinal disease genes to maximize genetic diagnostic rates. Few ABCA4 mutations were observed in our French Canadian patients. This population may contain an unidentified founder mutation. Our results indicate that CNVs are unlikely to be a major cause of STGD.

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