American Journal of Ophthalmology Case Reports (Mar 2022)

A case of adult-onset Wolfram syndrome with compound heterozygous mutations of the WFS1 gene

  • Jinhee Lee,
  • Takuya Iwasaki,
  • Tomoko Kaida,
  • Hideki Chuman,
  • Akiko Yoshimura,
  • Yuji Okamoto,
  • Hiroshi Takashima,
  • Kazunori Miyata

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25
p. 101315

Abstract

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Purpose: Wolfram syndrome is a rare genetic disorder characterized by juvenile onset of diabetes mellitus with bilateral optic atrophy. We report a case of adult onset Wolfram syndrome with diabetes mellitus at age 22 and optic atrophy after age 40. The WFS1 gene sequence was analyzed in the patient and her father. Observations: A 46-year-old woman presented with bilateral vision loss. She had developed diabetes mellitus at age 22 and underwent bilateral cataract surgery at age 37. Visual acuity was 20/50 in the right eye and 20/200 in the left eye. The pupillary light reflex was sluggish in both eyes. Fundus examination showed bilateral optic atrophy, but there was no diabetic retinopathy. Cecocentral scotoma of both eyes was observed in Goldmann perimetry. There were no intracranial lesions on magnetic resonance imaging. Audiometry demonstrated high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss. Sequence analysis of the WFS1 gene revealed compound heterozygous mutation: c.908T>C p.L303P and c.1232_1233del, p.S411Cfs*131 in the patient and heterozygous mutation c. 908 T>C, p. L303P in her father. Conclusions and importance: The patient was diagnosed with adult-onset Wolfram syndrome with compound heterozygous mutations of the WFS1 alleles. Wolfram syndrome must be ruled out even in adult-onset diabetic patients with optic atrophy.

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