Abstract
We present here the case histories of two siblings, a boy and a girl, with Leber’s congenital amaurosis (LCA). The diagnosis was based on non-recordable full-field electroretinogram (ffERG). The long-term ophthalmologic follow-up included kinetic perimetry (Goldmann), visual evoked potentials with flash stimulation, optical coherence tomography (OCT: B-scan images at the area of fovea), and multifocal ERG. The boy (sibling 1, born in 1986) was sent for electrophysiological examination at the age of four because he had nystagmus from birth. The diagnosis would be LCA based on non-recordable ffERG. Four years later, his visual acuity decreased rapidly due to vitreous opacification, caused by the autoimmune reaction of the retinal pigment epithelial cells. This was treated successfully with steroid injections, administered parabulbarly. Retinal autoimmune panel was not performed. Genetic testing became available only in 2019, and it revealed a RPE65 gene mutation: (NM_000329.2) c.{442G>A};{442G>A} (p.{Glu148Lys}; {Glu148Lys}). His sister (sibling 2, born in 1993) showed similar symptoms, caused by the same genetic mutation. Even though their parents were free of symptoms, it appeared that they were heterozygous carriers of the same mutation. Research of the family tree revealed a consanguineous marriage four generations before. Both siblings received successful gene therapy relatively late in their age: sibling 1 was 35 and sibling 2 was 28 years old, meaning that they were at an advanced stage of the disease. Nevertheless, follow-up examinations showed measurable improvements in their retinal function. The study shows that electrophysiological examinations, including flash-evoked responses, are useful in the objective evaluation of the progression in the central photoreceptor loss during the follow-up of LCA. The results also show that gene therapy can have beneficial effects even at an advanced stage of the disease.
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