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Corneal ectasia associated with posterior lamellar opacification

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posted on 2021-05-18, 14:40 authored by Madeline Yung, Angela C. Chen, Doug D. Chung, Alice Barrington, Junwei Zhang, Ricardo F. Frausto, Otavio A. Magalhaes, Anthony J. Aldave

Concomitant corneal ectasia and posterior lamellar corneal opacification is rare, and the genetic relationship between these two conditions is unclear. We report the genetic and clinical characterization of this phenotype in three unrelated individuals.

One previously reported affected individual and two unreported, unrelated, affected individuals were recruited for the study. Subjects and unaffected relatives underwent slit lamp examination, refraction, and multi-modal imaging. Saliva samples were obtained from two of the three affected individuals, from which DNA was extracted. Sanger sequencing was performed to identify mutations in genes associated with posterior amorphous corneal dystrophy (PACD), brittle cornea syndrome (BCS), and posterior polymorphous corneal dystrophy (PPCD), while copy number variation (CNV) analysis was used to identify CNV in the PACD locus.

Affected individuals demonstrated bilateral corneal steepening, stromal thinning and lamellar posterior corneal opacification. Corneal topography and tomography revealed conical or globular corneal steepening and decreased thickness. Anterior segment optical coherence tomography demonstrated hyperreflectivity of the posterior stroma in each of the affected individuals. Genetic testing did not detect a heterozygous deletion involving the PACD locus on chromosome 12 or a pathogenic mutation in the genes associated with BCS or PPCD.

Corneal ectasia may be associated with posterior lamellar stromal opacification that appears consistent with PACD. However, genetic testing for PACD as well as BCS and PPCD in affected individuals fails to reveal pathogenic deletions or mutations, indicating that other genetic factors are involved.

Funding

Support provided by National Eye Institute Grants R01 EY022082 (A.J.A.), P30 EY00331 (core grant), the Walton Li Chair in Cornea and Uveitis (A.J.A.), the Stotter Revocable Trust, and an unrestricted grant from Research to Prevent Blindness.

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