Abstract

To describe novel imaging findings in a family affected by central areolar choroidal dystrophy (CACD). Case series with multimodal retinal imaging assessment. A 19-year-old asymptomatic woman was referred for bilateral macular defects of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Blue-light autofluorescence (BAF) of her right eye revealed a speckled pattern in the macular area with a ring of decreased autofluorescence using near-infrared autofluorescence (NIR-AF). Multimodal assessment of her left eye disclosed a single parafoveal spot of decreased pigmentation that was clearly visible as hyper-autofluorescent using BAF and as hypo-autofluorescent using NIR-AF. Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) revealed several tiny areas of flow voids in correspondence of the RPE alterations of both eyes.Three family members were recently diagnosed with presumed age-related macular degeneration and demonstrated well-demarcated areas of RPE atrophy surrounded by yellowish deposits and a hypo-pigmented halo.Next-generation genetic analysis for inherited macular dystrophies was performed on the index case and the affected family members and revealed a p.Arg172Gln missense mutation in PRPH2 gene, leading to the diagnosis of CACD. Multimodal imaging can reveal new pathogenic insights in CACD. Of notice, NIR-AF and OCT-A are able to detect RPE hypopigmentation and choriocapillaris rarefaction, respectively, since the earliest stages of the disease.

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