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Congenital stationary night blindness: an update and review of the disease spectrum in Saudi Arabia

Journal

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA
Volume 99, Issue 6, Pages 581-591

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aos.14693

Keywords

CABP4; CACNA1F; congenital stationary night blindness; CSNB; fundus albipunctatus; phenotype; RDH5; RPE65; TRPM1

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Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) is a group of rare disorders of the retina, with an increasing number of genes being identified as causes. In Saudi Arabia, recessive mutations in TRPM1 and CABP4 are most common, associated with high myopia or hyperopia. Four novel mutations were discovered, and fundus albipunctatus was described for the first time in two patients, caused by mutations in RDH5 and RPE65. No cases of dominantly inherited CSNB were found.
Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) is a group of rare, mainly stationary disorders of the retina, resulting from dysfunction of several specific and essential visual processing mechanisms. The inheritance is often recessive and as such, CSNB may be more common among populations with a high degree of consanguinity. Here, we present a topic update and a review of the clinical and molecular genetic spectrum of CSNB in Saudi Arabia. Since a major review article on CSNB in 2015, which described 17 genes underlying CSNB, an additional four genes have been incriminated in autosomal recessive CSNB: RIMS2, GNB3, GUCY2D and ABCA4. These have been associated with syndromic cone-rod synaptic disease, ON bipolar cell dysfunction with reduced cone sensitivity, CSNB with dysfunction of the phototransduction (Riggs type) and CSNB with cone-rod dystrophy, respectively. In Saudi Arabia, a total of 24 patients with CSNB were identified, using a combination of literature search and retrospective study of previously unpublished cases. Recessive mutations in TRPM1 and CABP4 accounted for the majority of cases (5 and 13 for each gene, respectively). These genes were associated with complete (cCSNB) and incomplete (icCSNB), respectively, and were associated with high myopia in the former and hyperopia in the latter. Four novel mutations were identified. For the first time, we describe the fundus albipunctatus in two patients from Saudi Arabia, caused by recessive mutation in RDH5 and RPE65, where the former in addition featured findings compatible with cone dystrophy. No cases were identified with any dominantly inherited CSNB.

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