Early signs of longitudinal progressive cone photoreceptor degeneration in achromatopsia

MG Thomas, RJ McLean, S Kohl, V Sheth… - British Journal of …, 2012 - bjo.bmj.com
MG Thomas, RJ McLean, S Kohl, V Sheth, I Gottlob
British Journal of Ophthalmology, 2012bjo.bmj.com
Aims To characterise longitudinal progressive retinal changes in achromatopsia. Methods
Ultrahigh-resolution spectral optical coherence tomography (Copernicus, 3 μm axial
resolution) was used to obtain tomograms of the fovea from five children and three adults
with achromatopsia. Each patient was scanned twice with a mean follow-up time of 16
months. Progressive changes in reflectivity at the inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS)
junction, the central macular and outer nuclear layer thickness were analysed. Results …
Aims
To characterise longitudinal progressive retinal changes in achromatopsia.
Methods
Ultrahigh-resolution spectral optical coherence tomography (Copernicus, 3 μm axial resolution) was used to obtain tomograms of the fovea from five children and three adults with achromatopsia. Each patient was scanned twice with a mean follow-up time of 16 months. Progressive changes in reflectivity at the inner segment/outer segment (IS/OS) junction, the central macular and outer nuclear layer thickness were analysed.
Results
Younger patients (<10 years; patient 1–5) showed progressive morphological changes at the IS/OS junction between visits 1 and 2. However, older patients (>40 years; patients 6–8) did not have any changes in the retinal morphology between visits 1 and 2. In patients 1 and 2, IS/OS discontinuities (visit 1) developed into a hyper-reflective zone confined to the fovea (visit 2). In patient 3, the hyper-reflective zone (visit 1) progressed to form an IS/OS disruption and early formation of a small hypo-reflective zone (visit 2). Patients 4 and 5 had a hypo-reflective zone (visit 1) which subsequently increased in size (visit 2). There was a decrease in central macular and outer nuclear layer thickness between visits 1 and 2 in children.
Conclusions
For the first time, we show progressive longitudinal changes in retinal morphology in achromatopsia. Early changes include subtle IS/OS reflectivity alterations. The dynamic retinal changes in younger patients provide evidence that it represents a progressive disorder, and implementation of gene therapy during the early stages of the disease may provide best prognosis.
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