Natural Course of Retinitis Pigmentosa Over a Three-Year Interval

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Ninety-four patients, 6 to 49 years old, with progressive forms of retinitis pigmentosa were examined at baseline and annually for three consecutive years with respect to visual acuity, kinetic visual fields, dark-adaptation thresholds, computer-averaged electroretinograms, and fundus photographs. A subset was recalled within two months of a given visit to measure intervisit variability and to develop criteria for what constitutes significant (P < .01) functional change. Over a three-year interval full-field electroretinograms declined significantly in 66 of 86 patients (77%) with detectable responses at baseline. Patients lost an average of 16% to 18.5% of remaining electroretinographic amplitude per year and 4.6% of remaining visual field area per year. Bone spicule pigmentation increased in 41 of 76 patients for whom we could make comparisons over a three-year interval (54%). Visual acuity and dark-adaptation thresholds remained relatively stable.

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This study was supported in part by National Eye Institute Specialized Research Center Grant EY02014 and in part by the National Retinitis Pigmentosa Foundation, Baltimore, Maryland.

Reprint requests to Eliot L. Berson, M.D., Berman-Gund Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, 243 Charles St., Boston, MA 02114.

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