Abstract

To report clinical and genetic features including long-term full-field electroretinography (FF-ERG) findings of a patient with cone dystrophy with supernormal rod responses (CDSRR). Ophthalmological medical records including FF-ERG were retrospectively reviewed. Genetic analysis using whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed. Identified KCNV2 variants were confirmed by Sanger sequencing. A 30-year-old female patient was referred to our hospital for assessment of decreased vision from childhood. Funduscopy showed macular atrophy in both eyes. FF-ERG showed decreased amplitudes and delayed peak time of b-waves for dark-adapted (DA) 0.01 ERG, increased b/a-wave ratio with a slightly diminished a-wave for DA 3.0 and DA 25.7 ERG, residual a-waves and almost extinguished b-waves for light-adapted (LA) 3.0 ERG, and extremely diminished amplitudes in LA 30-Hz flicker responses. At 45years of age, funduscopy showed progressive macular atrophy, whereas the responses for her FF-ERG remained unchanged compared to those observed at 30years of age. WES identified the compound heterozygous KCNV2 variants (p.W67X and p.D174GfsX198) in the patient. These variants have previously been unreported as pathogenic variants. Each parent had one of the variants. Subsequently, the patient was finally diagnosed with CDSRR with the novel compound heterozygous KCNV2 variants. Biallelic loss-of-function KCNV2 variants (p.W67X and p.D174GfsX198) were identified as the cause of CDSRR. Long-term FF-ERG findings demonstrated there were no ERG changes during 15years of observation, indicating that there was no evidence of progressive peripheral retinal dysfunction, in spite of worsening macular atrophy.

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