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. 2017 Aug 21;5(6):709–719. doi: 10.1002/mgg3.329

Table 1.

Summary of genetic and clinical features of microphthalmia/anophthalmia patients included in this study

Family Gene Genomic change (GRCh37/hg19) Nucleotide change Protein change Status Pattern of inheritance Patient Gender Age Ocular phenotype BCVA Axial length (mm) Extraocular phenotype
MA_1 OTX2 g.57269051G>T c.272C>A p.(Ala91Asp) Het Autosomal dominant with incomplete penetrance III:2 Female 1 Bilateral anophthalmia, absence of optic nerves and quiasm NLP NA None
MA_2 PAX6 g.31824262C>G c.131G>A p.(Arg44Pro) Het Autosomal dominant showing gonosomal mosaicism III:3 Female 43 Mild bilateral microphthalmia, bilateral congenital cataract, nystagmus, foveal hypoplasia 20/65; 20/65 20.63/20.14 None
III:5 Female 38 Mild bilateral microphthalmia, bilateral congenital cataract, nystagmus, foveal hypoplasia 20/65; 20/100 20.85/20.75 None
IV:3 Female 4 Shortened axial length, unilateral central cataract, nystagmus, strabismus, hyperopia (+5) 20/100; 20/100 18.89/19.00 None
IV:4 Male 1 Unilateral central and cortical cataract, hyperopia (+4) 20/380; 20/380a 19.00/19.00 None
MA_3 RBP4 g.95353754A>T c.394T>A p.(Tyr132Asn) Het Autosomal dominant showing skewed maternal transmission, de novo phenomenon or incomplete penetrance III:3 Male 64 Bilateral microphthalmia and coloboma 20/2000; 20/2000 None

BCVA, best corrected visual acuity; Het, heterozygous; NLP, no light perception; NA, not applicable.

a

Tested with Teller Acuity Cards.