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Multicenter Study
. 2021 Nov;128(11):1549-1560.
doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2021.04.016. Epub 2021 Apr 20.

Childhood and Early Onset Glaucoma Classification and Genetic Profile in a Large Australasian Disease Registry

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Free article
Multicenter Study

Childhood and Early Onset Glaucoma Classification and Genetic Profile in a Large Australasian Disease Registry

Lachlan S W Knight et al. Ophthalmology. 2021 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: To report the relative frequencies of childhood and early onset glaucoma subtypes and their genetic findings in a large single cohort.

Design: Retrospective clinical and molecular study.

Participants: All individuals with childhood glaucoma (diagnosed 0 to <18 years) and early onset glaucoma (diagnosed 18 to <40 years) referred to a national disease registry.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the referrals of all individuals with glaucoma diagnosed at <40 years of age recruited to the Australian and New Zealand Registry of Advanced Glaucoma (ANZRAG). Subtypes of glaucoma were determined using the Childhood Glaucoma Research Network (CGRN) classification system. DNA extracted from blood or saliva samples underwent sequencing of genes associated with glaucoma.

Main outcome measures: The phenotype and genotype distribution of glaucoma diagnosed at <40 years of age.

Results: A total of 290 individuals (533 eyes) with childhood glaucoma and 370 individuals (686 eyes) with early onset glaucoma were referred to the ANZRAG. Primary glaucoma was the most prevalent condition in both cohorts. In the childhood cohort, 57.6% of individuals (167/290, 303 eyes) had primary congenital glaucoma (PCG), and 19.3% (56/290, 109 eyes) had juvenile open-angle glaucoma. Juvenile open-angle glaucoma constituted 73.2% of the early onset glaucoma cohort (271/370, 513 eyes). Genetic testing in probands resulted in a diagnostic yield of 24.7% (125/506) and a reclassification of glaucoma subtype in 10.4% of probands (13/125). The highest molecular diagnostic rate was achieved in probands with glaucoma associated with nonacquired ocular anomalies (56.5%). Biallelic variants in CYP1B1 (n = 29, 23.2%) and heterozygous variants in MYOC (n = 24, 19.2%) and FOXC1 (n = 21, 16.8%) were most commonly reported among probands with a molecular diagnosis. Biallelic CYP1B1 variants were reported in twice as many female individuals as male individuals with PCG (66.7% vs. 33.3%, P = 0.02).

Conclusions: We report on the largest cohort of individuals with childhood and early onset glaucoma from Australasia using the CGRN classification. Primary glaucoma was most prevalent. Genetic diagnoses ascertained in 24.7% of probands supported clinical diagnoses and genetic counseling. International collaborative efforts are required to identify further genes because the majority of individuals still lack a clear molecular diagnosis.

Keywords: Childhood glaucoma; Early onset glaucoma; Genetic testing; Glaucoma; Glaucoma genetics.

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