Clinical Description
A wide range of clinical phenotypes has been recognized to date [Suzuki & Tomita 2008]. The amount of cutaneous pigmentation in OCA4 is a continuum from minimal to near normal [Newton et al 2001, Inagaki et al 2004, Rundshagen et al 2004, Ikinciogullari et al 2005, Inagaki et al 2005]. The amount of iris and retinal pigment varies and visual acuity covers a wide range; however, no subtypes of OCA4 are recognized.
Individuals with albinism (including OCA4) are usually recognized within the first year of life because of the ocular features of nystagmus and strabismus. In many families, particularly in those with darker constitutional pigmentation, the cutaneous hypopigmentation is also obvious at birth and suggests the diagnosis.
Eye
Nystagmus. Some children with albinism have nystagmus that is noticed by the parents and the examining physician in the delivery room. Many children with albinism do not have nystagmus at birth and the parents note slow wandering eye movements and a lack of visual attention. The parents may become concerned because the child does not seem to "focus well," but the absence of nystagmus may delay the diagnosis. Most children with albinism develop nystagmus by age three to four months, and the diagnosis is often considered at the four-to-six month well-baby check-up. The nystagmus can be rapid early in life and generally slows with time; however, nearly all individuals with albinism have nystagmus throughout their lives. Nystagmus is more noticeable when individuals are tired, angry, or anxious, and less marked when they are well rested and feeling well [Summers 2009].
Iris color ranges from blue to brown. In one individual with OCA4, who had been misdiagnosed at birth as having OCA1 because of complete iris transillumination, the amount of iris pigment increased in the first ten years, resulting in blue iris color [Suzuki et al 2005].
Visual acuity in individuals with OCA4 ranges from 20/30 to 20/400 and is usually in the range of 20/100 to 20/200 [Rundshagen et al 2004, Suzuki et al 2005]. Vision is likely to be stable after early childhood and no major change or further reduction in vision should occur; loss of vision later in life is generally not related to the albinism.
Hair/Skin
The range of hair and skin pigment in individuals with OCA4 is broad [Newton et al 2001, Inagaki et al 2004, Rundshagen et al 2004, Ikinciogullari et al 2005, Inagaki et al 2005].
Hair. Individuals with OCA4 are often born with some pigment in their hair that ranges in color from silvery white to light yellow.
Scalp hair may be very light, but it is usually not completely white (not as white as a sheet of paper or fresh snow); some parents may refer to light yellow/blond hair color as "white" or "nearly white" if it is very lightly pigmented or is much lighter than the hair color of other family members at a similar age.
Furthermore, the definition of "white" scalp hair is not easy in some young children because the hair may be sparse and short and because some shampoos discolor hair.
It is helpful to hold a piece of white paper next to the hair to determine if it is truly white.
Hair color may darken with time, but usually the hair color does not change dramatically between childhood and adulthood [
Inagaki et al 2004].
Skin. When hair color is blond or yellow, the skin is usually creamy white with little or no pigmentation. When hair color is somewhat darker, the skin is usually similar to that seen in unaffected individuals [Thody et al 1991].
Skin color in individuals with OCA4 is not usually as white as that in individuals with the OCA1A subtype of oculocutaneous albinism type 1, reflecting the fact that skin melanocytes in individuals with OCA4 can still synthesize some melanin; however, the majority of the melanin is yellow pheomelanin rather than black-brown eumelanin.
Skin cancer risk. Over many years, exposure of lightly pigmented skin to the sun can result in coarse, rough, thickened skin (pachydermia), solar keratoses (premalignant lesions), and skin cancer. Both basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma can develop. The incidence rate of melanoma in individuals with OCA is unknown; however, the risk for melanoma in this population is generally considered to be higher than in unaffected individuals [Streutker et al 2000, Asuquo et al 2009].
Skin cancer is unusual in individuals with OCA4 in the US because of the availability of sunscreens, the social acceptability of wearing clothes that cover most of the exposed skin, and the fact that individuals with albinism often do not spend a great deal of time outside in the sun. Skin cancer in an individual with any type of OCA is very rare in northern areas of the US. Skin cancer in individuals with albinism is common particularly in some parts of Africa because of the increased amount of sun exposure throughout the year, the cultural differences in protective dress, and lack of skin-protective agents such as sunscreens. In addition, African individuals with albinism tend to have poorer prognosis with skin cancer because of late presentation to care and failure to complete treatment for economic reasons [Mabula et al 2012].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
The lack of a functional assay for the SLC45A2 protein and the limited data from SLC45A2 molecular genetic testing make genotype-phenotype correlations difficult [Newton et al 2001, Rundshagen et al 2004, Ikinciogullari et al 2005, Inagaki et al 2005, Konno et al 2009].
Two common pathogenic alleles, p.Asp157Asn and p.Gly188Val, have been reported in Japanese individuals. The p.Asp157Asn allele may have very low functional activity in melanogenesis; p.Gly188Val may have some residual functional activity [Inagaki et al 2004].
Recently, a family with autosomal dominant OCA4 has been reported [Oki et al 2017], with a novel heterozygous pathogenic variant: c.208T>C (p.Tyr70His). Family members with the variant demonstrate a relatively mild phenotype, with a slightly creamy complexion, brown to black hair, and mild iris hypopigmentation.
The degree of cutaneous pigmentation, ocular pigmentation, and visual development resulting from particular SLC45A2 pathogenic variants cannot be predicted at this time.
Prevalence
Prevalence of OCA4 is thought to be on the order of 1:100,000 in most populations throughout the world. It is likely to be more common in Japan, where it accounts for 24% of individuals with OCA [Inagaki et al 2004, Inagaki et al 2005].
OCA4 has also been described in individuals of German, Turkish, Korean, Indian, Chinese, Danish, and Moroccan descent [Newton et al 2001, Rundshagen et al 2004, Ikinciogullari et al 2005, Suzuki et al 2005, Sengupta et al 2007, Grønskov et al 2009, Konno et al 2009].