Aniridia
Aniridia is a pan ocular disorder affecting the cornea, iris, intraocular pressure, lens, fovea, and optic nerve. The phenotype is variable between and within families; however, affected individuals usually show little variability between the two eyes. Individuals with aniridia characteristically show nystagmus, impaired visual acuity (usually 20/100 - 20/200), and foveal hypoplasia. Milder forms of aniridia with subtle iris architecture changes, good vision, and normal foveal structure do occur [Hingorani et al 2009]. Other abnormalities include corneal changes, glaucoma, cataract, lens subluxation, strabismus, optic nerve coloboma and hypoplasia, and occasionally microphthalmia.
The reduction in visual acuity is primarily caused by foveal hypoplasia, but cataracts, glaucoma, and corneal opacification are responsible for progressive visual failure. Most children with aniridia present at birth with an obvious iris or pupillary abnormality or in infancy with nystagmus (usually apparent by age 6 weeks). Congenital glaucoma rarely occurs in aniridia; in such cases, a large corneal diameter and corneal edema may be the presenting findings. Despite their many ocular issues, most individuals with aniridia can retain useful vision with appropriate ophthalmologic management.
Iris. The most obvious ocular abnormality is iris hypoplasia. The severity varies from a nearly normal iris to almost complete iris absence, in which a small stump of residual iris tissue is visible on gonioscopy, anterior segment optical coherence tomography (OCT), or ultrasound biomicroscopy [Okamoto et al 2004]. In less extreme cases, the pupil size may be normal, but there may be loss of the iris surface architecture or the presence of iris transillumination [Hingorani et al 2009]. Other iris changes include partial iris defects (resembling a coloboma) or eccentric or misshapen pupils and iris ectropion [Nelson et al 1984, Willcock et al 2006].
Lens. Congenital lens opacities (especially polar) are common [Gramer et al 2012]. Often there is persistent vascularization of the anterior lens capsule (tunica vasculosa lentis) or remnants of the pupillary membrane. The lens opacities are rarely dense enough to require lens extraction in infancy, but visually significant lens opacities eventually develop in 50%-85% of affected individuals, often in the teens or early adulthood. Lens subluxation or dislocation occurs but is uncommon.
Intraocular pressure. When elevated intraocular pressure is associated with loss of retinal ganglion cells resulting in visual field loss and optic nerve cupping, a diagnosis of glaucoma is made. Both elevated intraocular pressure and glaucoma are common in people with aniridia and may eventually occur in up to two thirds of individuals [Gramer et al 2012]. The onset of glaucoma is usually in later childhood or adulthood; glaucoma in infancy is rare [Gramer et al 2012].
Cornea. Keratopathy (corneal degeneration) is a relatively late manifestation with multifactorial causes including limbal stem cell abnormalities and abnormal wound healing [Ramaesh et al 2005]. Changes vary from mild peripheral vascularization to pan corneal vascularization, opacification, and keratinization. Inadequate tear production is common and exacerbates the ocular surface problems. Central corneal thickness is increased – a finding of uncertain clinical relevance, but which may result in undermeasurement of intraocular pressure on tonometry [Brandt et al 2004, Whitson et al 2005]. Rarely, those with aniridia may have microcornea and, extremely rarely, megalocornea [Lipsky & Salim 2011, Wang et al 2012].
Fovea. Foveal hypoplasia is usually (but not always) present. Findings include reduced foveal reflex, macular hypopigmentation, and crossing of the usual foveal avascular zone by retinal vessels. OCT images can clearly delineate the absence of normal foveal architecture.
Optic nerve. Optic nerve hypoplasia (i.e., the optic nerve head appears abnormally small) may occur in up to 10% and there may be optic nerve colobomata [McCulley et al 2005].
Aniridic fibrosis syndrome. Individuals with aniridia who have a history of multiple ocular procedures (penetrating keratoplasty, intraocular lenses [IOLs], and drainage tube insertion) may rarely develop aniridic fibrosis syndrome in which a fibrotic retrolenticular and retrocorneal membrane arises from the root of the rudimentary iris tissue. This membrane may cause forward displacement of the IOLs, IOL entrapment, and corneal decompensation [Tsai et al 2005].
Retina. Retinal detachment may occur, probably as a consequence of a high myopia or previous intraocular surgery. Very rarely, primary retinal manifestations such as an exudative vascular retinopathy or chorioretinal degeneration may be seen [Hingorani et al 2009, Aggarwal et al 2011].
Other ocular manifestations. Affected individuals may have significant refractive errors and may develop a secondary strabismus (squint, eye misalignment). Some affected individuals have microphthalmia (manifest as decreased axial length on USS B-scan) and ocular coloboma (iris, chorioretinal, and/or optic disc).
Central nervous system. Individuals with isolated aniridia may show reduced olfaction and cognition, behavioral issues, or developmental delay. Central nervous system abnormalities (including absence or hypoplasia of the anterior commissure; abnormalities of gray matter in the anterior cingulate cortex, cerebellum, and temporal and occipital lobes; white matter deficits in and reduced volume of the corpus callosum; absence of the pineal gland; and occasionally olfactory bulb hypoplasia) can be demonstrated on MRI [Sisodiya et al 2001, Free et al 2003, Mitchell et al 2003, Ellison-Wright et al 2004, Valenzuela & Cline 2004, Bamiou et al 2007, Abouzeid et al 2009, Grant et al 2017].
Hearing. Central auditory processing difficulties (from abnormal interhemispheric transfer) present in some individuals may cause hearing difficulties. This finding is particularly important in the context of associated visual impairment [Bamiou et al 2007].
Wilms Tumor-Aniridia-Genital Anomalies-Retardation (WAGR) Syndrome
Individuals with molecularly confirmed deletions of 11p13 involving PAX6 and WT1 are diagnosed with WAGR syndrome [Clericuzio et al 2011, Blanco-Kelly et al 2017].
Aniridia is almost universally present in individuals with such a deletion and typically is complete. However, WAGR without aniridia has been described.
Wilms tumor risk for children with a molecularly confirmed heterozygous contiguous-gene deletion of PAX6 and WT1 at chromosome 11p13 is between 42.5% and 77% [Fischbach et al 2005, Clericuzio et al 2011]. Of those who develop Wilms tumor, 90% do so by age four years and 98% by age seven years. Compared to children with isolated Wilms tumor, children with WAGR syndrome are more likely to develop bilateral tumors and to have an earlier age of diagnosis and more favorable tumor histology with a better prognosis [Halim et al 2012].
Wilms tumor, also known as a nephroblastoma, is a childhood kidney malignancy. Associated features include abdominal pain, fever, anemia, hematuria, and hypertension in up to 30% of affected children. See Wilms Tumor Predisposition.
The risk of later end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) is significant, relating to Wilms tumor and its surgery, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, and occasionally renal malformation. The rate of ESKD is 36% with unilateral Wilms tumor and 90% with bilateral Wilms tumor. Approximately 25% of individuals with WAGR syndrome have proteinuria ranging from minimal to overt nephritic syndrome [Breslow et al 2005, Fischbach et al 2005].
Genitourinary abnormalities include ambiguous genitalia, urethral strictures, ureteric abnormalities, and gonadoblastoma. Males display cryptorchidism (most common feature, seen in 60%) and hypospadias. Females may have uterine abnormalities including bicornate uterus and streak ovaries; their external genitalia are usually normal [Fischbach et al 2005].
Intellectual disability and behavioral abnormalities in WAGR syndrome are highly variable:
Intellectual disability (defined as IQ <74) is seen in 70% of individuals with WAGR syndrome; other individuals with WAGR syndrome can have normal intellect without behavioral issues.
Behavioral abnormalities include attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder, anxiety, depression, and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Neurologic abnormalities occur in up to one third of individuals with WAGR syndrome. Findings include hypertonia or hypotonia, epilepsy, enlarged ventricles, corpus callosum agenesis, and microcephaly.
Obesity. The association of obesity in the WAGR spectrum, for which the acronym WAGRO has been suggested, has been confirmed [Brémond-Gignac et al 2005a].
Other. Affected individuals may also show craniofacial dysmorphism, hemihypertrophy, growth retardation, scoliosis, and kyphosis. Other anomalies reported on occasion include polydactyly and congenital diaphragmatic hernia [Nelson et al 1984, Brémond-Gignac et al 2005b, Manoukian et al 2005, Scott et al 2005] (see Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Overview).