Clinical Description
Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) typically presents in young adults as bilateral painless subacute visual failure. The peak age of onset in LHON is in the second and third decades of life, with 95% of those who lose their vision doing so before age 50 years. Very rarely, individuals first manifest LHON in the seventh and eighth decades of life [Dimitriadis et al 2014]. Males are four to five times more likely to be affected than females, but neither sex nor mutational status significantly influences the timing and severity of the initial visual loss.
In the presymptomatic phase, fundal abnormalities including peripapillary telangiectatic vessels and variable degrees of retinal nerve fiber layer edema have been previously documented; these can vary with time [Nikoskelainen 1994]. Using optical coherence tomography imaging, thickening of the temporal retinal nerve fiber layer was confirmed in clinically unaffected individuals with a LHON-causing mtDNA pathogenic variant, providing further evidence that the papillomacular bundle is particularly vulnerable in LHON [Savini et al 2005]. On more detailed investigation, some individuals with a LHON-causing mtDNA pathogenic variant can also exhibit subtle impairment of optic nerve function including (1) loss of color vision affecting mostly the red-green system, (2) reduced contrast sensitivity, and (3) subnormal electroretinogram and visual evoked potential [Sadun et al 2006].
Affected individuals are usually entirely asymptomatic until they develop visual blurring affecting the central visual field in one eye (acute phase); similar symptoms appear in the other eye within weeks or months, with at least 97% of affected individuals having bilateral involvement within one year [Newman et al 2020]. In 25%-50% of individuals, visual loss is bilateral at onset. The most characteristic feature is an enlarging central or centrocecal scotoma, and as the field defect increases in size and density, visual acuity deteriorates to the level of counting fingers or worse.
Broad generalizations with regard to specific LHON-causing pathogenic variants:
Variants
m.3460G>A and
m.11778G>A are associated with significant impairment in visual function and poor visual recovery.
Variant
m.14484T>C is associated with the best long-term visual outcome.
Following the nadir, visual acuity may improve. Note, however, that recovery of visual function in LHON – if it does occur – is usually incomplete.
Reported visual recovery rates in persons with LHON are summarized in Table 3.
In a meta-analysis of 12 retrospective and three prospective studies providing visual function information on 695 affected individuals with the m.11778G>A variant, visual recovery occurred in 14% of affected individuals of all ages and 11% of those age 15 years or older [Newman et al 2020].
Table 3.
Visual Recovery Rates by Pathogenic Variant in Individuals with Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy
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- 1.
Different criteria were used to define visual recovery; the range partly reflects this variability.
- 2.
Although published reports would appear to indicate otherwise, the m.3460G>A pathogenic variant is generally accepted among experts as having the worst visual recovery rate [Author, personal communication].
Other predictors of better visual recovery have included an earlier age of onset (≤12 years), a subacute presentation with slow visual deterioration, and a relatively large optic disc [Barboni et al 2006, Ramos et al 2009, Majander et al 2017].
The lifetime risk of visual failure by sex and age in individuals with a homoplasmic primary LHON-causing pathogenic variant is summarized in Table 4.
Table 4.
Lifetime Risk for Visual Failure in Individuals with a Homoplasmic Primary LHON-Causing Mitochondrial DNA Pathogenic Variant by Study
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F = female(s); M = male(s)
The chronic phase is characterized by optic atrophy (which typically develops within six weeks of the onset of visual loss), marked thinning of the retinal nerve fiber layer, and a dense central or centrocecal scotoma. Most persons remain severely visually impaired and are within the legal requirements for blind registration [Kirkman et al 2009a].
Other neurologic features associated with LHON. Some neurologic abnormalities (e.g., postural tremor, peripheral neuropathy, nonspecific myopathy, movement disorders, Leigh syndrome) have been reported to be common in individuals with LHON [McFarland et al 2007, Martikainen et al 2016].
A multiple sclerosis (MS)-like illness has been reported in association with all three primary mtDNA LHON-causing pathogenic variants (m.3460G>A, m.11778G>A, and m.14484T>C), but with a female bias [Pfeffer et al 2013].
The pattern of visual loss in LHON-MS appears distinct from classic LHON, being marked by recurrent episodes of visual loss that can be associated with ocular pain, but with incomplete visual recovery and progression to legal blindness in half of all affected persons [Pfeffer et al 2013]. In addition to a severe bilateral optic neuropathy, these individuals manifest disseminated central nervous system demyelination, with characteristic periventricular white matter lesions on neuroimaging and unmatched cerebrospinal fluid oligoclonal bands [Bhatti & Newman 1999, Horváth et al 2000, Palace 2009].
Cardiac conduction defects and LHON. A Finnish study showed an increased incidence of cardiac arrhythmias secondary to accessory pathways in association with LHON [Nikoskelainen 1994]; this finding has not been replicated in other populations [Bower et al 1992].