Microphthalmia


Microphthalmia, also referred as microphthalmos, is a developmental disorder of the eye in which one or both eyes are abnormally small and have anatomic malformations. It is different from nanophthalmos in which the eye is small in size but has no anatomical alterations.

Presentation

The presence of a small eye within the orbit can be a normal incidental finding but in most cases it is abnormal and results in blindness. The incidence is 14 per 100,000 and the condition affects 3-11% of blind children.

Causes

Microphthalmia in newborns is sometimes associated with fetal alcohol syndrome or infections during pregnancy, particularly herpes simplex virus, rubella and cytomegalovirus, but the evidence is inconclusive. Genetic causes of microphthalmia include chromosomal abnormalities or monogenetic Mendelian disorders. The latter may be autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive or X linked.
The following genes have been implicated in microphthalmia, many of which are transcription and regulatory factors:
HGNC symbolDescriptionOMIMType
BCORBCL6 corepressorMCOPS2
BMP4Induces cartilage and bone formationMCOPS6
CRYBA4crystallin, beta A4--
FOXE3forkhead box E3--
GDF3growth differentiation factor 3--
GDF6growth differentiation factor 6--
MITFmicrophthalmia-associated transcription factor--
OTX2orthodenticle homeobox 2--
PAX6paired box 6--
PITX3Paired-like homeodomain transcription factor 3--
RAXretina and anterior neural fold homeobox--
SHHsonic hedgehog homolog--
SIX6SIX homeobox 6--
SOX2SRY -box 2MCOPS3
VSX1visual system homeobox 1 VSX1visual system homeobox 1-
RAB18Ras-related protein 18--
VSX2 visual system homeobox 2--

How these genes result in the eye disorder is unknown but it has been postulated that interference with the process of eye growth after birth may be involved in contrast to anophthalmia which originates much earlier during foetal development. SOX2 has been implicated in a substantial number of cases and in many other cases failure to develop the ocular lens often results in microphthalmia. Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor located on chromosome 14q32 is associated with one form of isolated microphthalmia, in the pigmented retina prevents this structure from fully differentiating. This in turn causes a malformation of the choroid fissure of the eye, resulting in the drainage of vitreous humor fluid. Without this fluid, the eye fails to enlarge, thus the name microphthalmia.The gene encoding the microphthalmia-associated transcription factor is a member of the basic helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper family. Waardenburg syndrome type 2 in humans is also a type of microphthalmia syndrome. Mutations in MITF gene are thought to be responsible for this syndrome. The human MITF gene is homologous to the mouse MITF gene ; mouse with mutations in this gene are hypopigmented in their fur. The identification of the genetics of WS type 2 owes a lot to observations of phenotypes of MITF mutant mice.

Diagnosis

Treatment

Microphthalmia cannot be cured. When the eye function is maintained, a patient's vision can be improved by plus lenses, as a small eye is usually hyperopic.

Epidemiology

The most extensive epidemiological survey on this congenital malformation has been carried out by Dharmasena et al and using English National Hospital Episode Statistics, they calculated the annual incidence of anophthalmia, microphthalmia and congenital malformations of orbit/lacrimal apparatus from 1999 to 2011. According to this study the annual incidence of congenital microphthalmia in the United Kingdom was 10.8 in 1999 and 10.0 in 2011.