T. Rosenberg et al., THE PREVALENCE OF USHER-SYNDROME AND OTHER RETINAL DYSTROPHY-HEARING IMPAIRMENT ASSOCIATIONS, Clinical genetics, 51(5), 1997, pp. 314-321
The study was undertaken to procure population-based prevalence data o
n the various types of Usher syndrome and other retinal dystrophy-hear
ing impairment associations. The medical files on 646 patients with a
panretinal pigmentary dystrophy aged 20-49 years derived from the Dani
sh Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) register were scrutinised. The data were
supplemented by a prior investigation on hearing ability in a part of
the study population. After exclusion of patients with possibly extrin
sic causes of hearing impairments, 118 patients, including 89 cases of
Usher syndrome were allocated to one of five clinically defined group
s. We calculated the following prevalence rates: Usher syndrome type I
: 1.5/100 000, Usher syndrome type II: 2.2/100 000, and Usher syndrome
type III: 0.1/100 000 corresponding to a 2:3 ratio between Usher synd
rome type I and II. The overall prevalence rate of Usher syndrome was
estimated to 5/100 000 in the Danish population, devoid of genetic iso
lates. The material comprised 11 cases with retinal dystrophy, hearing
impairment, and additional syndromic features. Finally, 18 subjects w
ith various retinal dystrophy-hearing impairment associations without
syndromic features were identified, corresponding to a prevalence rate
of 0.8/100 000. This group had a significant overrepresentation of X-
linked RP, including two persons harboring a mutation in the retinitis
pigmentosa GTP-ase regulator (RPGR) gene.