THE SPECTRUM OF INTERNAL LIMITING MEMBRANE DISEASE IN ALPORT SYNDROME: A Multimodal Imaging Study

Maria Vittoria Cicinelli, Markus Ritter, Cybele Ghossein, Constantin Aschauer, Franco Laccone, Mato Nagel, Ursula M. Schmidt-Erfurth, Lee M. Jampol, Manjot K. Gill*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To characterize the spectrum of internal limiting membrane (ILM) disease in Alport syndrome using multimodal imaging, including widefield (WF) and ultra-widefield (UWF) modalities, and to report their relative prevalence according to the genetic pattern of inheritance. Methods: Cross-sectional clinical study of patients diagnosed with Alport syndrome. All patients underwent UWF color photography and autofluorescence, WF-optical coherence tomography angiography and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Demographics, past medical and ophthalmic history, and genetic mutation history were collected. Results: Forty-two eyes of 21 patients (11 men; age 36.6 ± 12.9 years) were included. Macular spectral-domain optical coherence tomography revealed ILM granularity, more frequent in X-linked Alport syndrome and corresponding to dot maculopathy on color fundus. Mid-peripheral spectral-domain optical coherence tomography scans revealed multilamellated ILM in eight eyes (19%), presumably progressive, which corresponded to a cavitary pattern on en-face OCT. En-face OCT revealed multiple areas of retinal nerve fiber layer dehiscence in the macula, overlapping with vascular lacunae on optical coherence tomography angiography, and a coarse arrangement of retinal nerve fiber layer above and below the temporal raphe in 20 eyes (52%). Conclusion: Multimodal imaging allowed for the detection/characterization of retinal findings (ILM granularity, progressive ILM lamellation, retinal nerve fiber layer dehiscence, vascular lacunae, and coarse arrangement of retinal nerve fiber layer toward the disc) as multifaceted manifestations of ILM disease in Alport syndrome.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)274-282
Number of pages9
JournalRetina
Volume42
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2022

Funding

Supported by an Unrestricted Departmental Grant from Research to Prevent Blindness.

Keywords

  • Alport syndrome
  • Genetic diseases
  • Internal limiting membrane
  • Multimodal imaging
  • Optical coherence tomography
  • Optical coherence tomography angiography

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ophthalmology

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