4.6 Article

IMPG2-Related Maculopathy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY
Volume 258, Issue -, Pages 32-42

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajo.2023.10.002

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The study investigated the phenotype, variability, and penetrance of IMPG2-related maculopathy. The results showed that mono-allelic IMPG2 variants could result in haploinsufficiency manifesting as a maculopathy with variable penetrance and expressivity. Family members of patients with IMPG2-related retinitis pigmentosa may also present with vitelliform lesions. The maculopathy is usually limited to the fovea and is associated with moderate visual impairment.
Purpose: To investigate the phenotype, variability, and penetrance of IMPG2-related maculopathy.Design: Retrospective observational case series.Methods: Clinical evaluation, multimodal retinal imaging, genetic testing, and molecular modeling.Results: A total of 25 individuals with a mono-allelic IMPG2 variant were included, 5 of whom were relatives of patients with IMPG2-associated retinitis pigmentosa. A distinct maculopathy was present in 17 individuals (median age, 52 years; range, 20-72 years), and included foveal elevation with or without subretinal vitelliform material or focal atrophy of the retinal pigment epithelium. Best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was >= 20/50 in the better eye (n = 15), and 5 patients were asymptomatic. Longitudinal observation (n = 8, up to 19 years) demonstrated stable maculopathy (n = 3), partial/complete resorption (n = 4) or increase (n = 1) of the subretinal material, with overall stable vision (n = 6). No manifest maculopathy was observed in 8 individuals (median age, 58 years; range, 43-83 years; BCVA >= 20/25), all were identified through segregation analysis. All 8 individuals were asymptomatic, with minimal foveal changes observed on optical coherence tomography in 3 cases. A total of 18 different variants were detected, 11 of them truncating. Molecular modeling of 5 missense variants [c.727G>C, c.1124C>A, c.2816T>A, c.3047T>C, and c.3193G>A] supported the hypothesis that these have a loss-of-function effect.Conclusions: Mono-allelic IMPG2 variants may result in haploinsufficiency manifesting as a maculopathy with variable penetrance and expressivity. Family members of patients with IMPG2-related retinitis pigmentosa may present with vitelliform lesions. The maculopathy often remains limited to the fovea and is usually associated with moderate visual impairment.

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