Abstract
The study aimed to describe the phenotypic features of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) associated with the previously described EYS C2139Y variant in Singaporeans and establish the importance of this variant as a prevalent cause of RP among East Asians. A clinical phenotyping and exome-sequencing study was conducted on consecutive patients with nonsyndromic RP. Epidemiological analysis was performed using Singaporean and global population-based genetic data. A study of 150 consecutive unrelated individuals with nonsyndromic RP found that 87 (58%) of cases had plausible genotypes. A previously described missense variant in the EYS gene, 6416G>A (C2139Y), occurred heterozygously or homozygously in 17 of 150 families (11.3%), all with autosomal recessive RP. Symptom onset in EYS C2139Y-related RP ranged from 6 to 45 years, with visual acuity ranging from 20/20 at 21 years to no light perception by 48 years. C2139Y-related RP had typical findings, including sectoral RP in cases with EYS E2703X in trans . The median age at presentation was 45 years and visual fields declined to less than 20° (Goldmann V4e isopter) by age 65 years. Intereye correlation for visual acuity, fields, and ellipsoid band width was high (r 2 = 0.77-0.95). Carrier prevalence was 0.66% (allele frequency of 0.33%) in Singaporean Chinese and 0.34% in East Asians, suggesting a global disease burden exceeding 10,000 individuals. The EYS C2139Y variant is common in Singaporean RP patients and other ethnic Chinese populations. Targeted molecular therapy for this single variant could potentially treat a significant proportion of RP cases worldwide.
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