Clinical Description
The spectrum of ADAMTSL4-related eye disorders is a continuum that includes the phenotypes known as autosomal recessive isolated ectopia lentis and ectopia lentis et pupillae as well as more minor eye anomalies with no displacement of the pupil and very mild displacement of the lens. Variability in the eye findings described in detail in Diagnosis is observed among affected individuals in a family and even between eyes in the same individual.
Presentation. The diagnosis of ectopia lentis is usually made in early childhood although dislocation of the lens may be present at birth [Neuhann et al 2011]. When ectopia lentis is accompanied by severe ectopia pupillae, the diagnosis is usually made at birth; in mild cases, the findings may not be recognized until adulthood. The clinical presentation in ADAMTSL4-related eye disorders is considered to be more severe than that seen in individuals with other nonsyndromic forms of ectopia lentis [Chandra et al 2012].
Refractive errors are common:
Hyperopia (+5 D to +15 D) occurs when the lens is dislocated out of the visual axis resulting in a functionally aphakic eye.
Myopia (-5 D to >-15 D) may result from increased axial growth of the eye, or because of abnormalities like spherophakia and lens coloboma.
Various degrees of astigmatism, sometimes quite large, are frequently observed.
In children, uncorrected refractive errors and anisometropia (unequal refractive errors between the two eyes) may lead to amblyopia. One study found that the risk for amblyopia was highest when the lens was still covering the visual axis and the edge of the lens was within 0.3-2.3 mm of the center of the pupil [Romano et al 2002].
Cataract can be seen at an early age. In the study by Christensen et al [2010], all affected individuals older than age 45 years had undergone cataract surgery.
Elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is seen in up to 20%-25% of affected individuals [Christensen et al 2010, Neuhann et al 2011]. In the event of anterior subluxation of the lens, an acute rise in intraocular pressure may occur. Of note, the central corneal thickness can be increased (median value 589 μm; range 528-630 μm) [Christensen et al 2010], which may explain, to some extent, why some individuals have moderately elevated intraocular pressure, but few have glaucomatous damage of the optic nerve head.
Retinal detachment occurs more frequently than in the general population; in some individuals retinal detachment as well as elevated IOP could be the consequence of lensectomy or cataract surgery [Christensen et al 2010, Neuhann et al 2015, Overwater et al 2017].
Progression of the lens displacement and development of cataract may occur over time, whereas the pupillary displacement is fairly stable.
Visual acuity varies from light perception to 20/20 depending on the degree of amblyopia, the presence of cataract, or sequelae after retinal detachment or glaucoma. Surprisingly, some individuals with highly displaced pupils may have normal visual acuity.
Nonocular findings. Individuals with ADAMTSL4-related eye disorders have, in general, no additional systemic manifestations although there have been some reports of skeletal features including craniosynostosis, pes planus, pectus carinatum, scoliosis, and/or joint laxity in a few affected individuals [Christensen et al 2010, Chandra et al 2013a, Overwater et al 2017].
Prevalence
In studies of individuals with nonsyndromic ectopia lentis, the proportion of those having a pathogenic variant in ADAMTSL4 ranges from 0% in a group of Chinese individuals to 50% in several groups of European individuals [Aragon-Martin et al 2010, Chandra et al 2012, Li et al 2014, Overwater et al 2017, van Bysterveldt et al 2017].
Pathogenic variants frequently associated with ADAMTSL4-related eye disorders vary across populations. The ADAMTSL4
c.767_786del pathogenic variant is common across Europe and probably represents a founder variant. In western Norway, three of 190 blood donors were heterozygous for this variant, suggesting that the frequency of homozygous individuals in this population is around 1:16,000 (with wide confidence intervals) [Christensen et al 2010].
In a German study, two of 360 ethnically matched anonymous individuals were heterozygous for this pathogenic variant [Neuhann et al 2011].
In Polynesians (Maori) the c.2237G>A (p.Arg746His) variant is common with an observed frequency in carriers of 1:132 [van Bysterveldt et al 2017]. In Bukharian Jews originating from Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, the most common variant is c.2594G>A (p.Arg865His) (reported as c.2663G>A [p.Arg888His]) with a carrier frequency of 1:48 predicting a frequency of homozygous individuals around 1:9,000 [Reinstein et al 2016].