- Article
Diagnostic Role of Chromatic Full-Field Stimulus Test in Rod–Cone Versus Cone Dystrophies
- Aykut Demirkol,
- Esra Sahli and
- Stephen H. Tsang
- + 4 authors
Background: Inherited retinal dystrophies are a heterogeneous group of progressive disorders impacting photoreceptor function, often limiting the usefulness of standard electroretinography in advanced cases. Full-field stimulus test (FST) testing has become a sensitive psychophysical technique for detecting residual visual function when traditional electrophysiology is non-recordable. This study evaluated the ability of chromatic FST to differentiate rod–cone from cone photoreceptor dysfunction in patients with genetically confirmed inherited retinal dystrophies. Methods: Cross-sectional FST data were analyzed from 39 patients (mean age 45.7 ± 20.0 years) with genetically confirmed inherited retinal dystrophies at a tertiary academic center. All participants underwent standardized FST testing using white, red, and blue stimuli. Patients were classified into rod–cone dystrophy (n = 27) or cone dystrophy (n = 12) groups based on genetic and clinical criteria. Group comparisons focused on FST thresholds and especially blue–red threshold differences as markers of photoreceptor-mediated function. Bonferroni correction was applied to adjust for multiple comparisons across four primary FST parameters. Additional analyses by genotype were performed with nonparametric tests. Results: Eight different genetic mutations were represented, including Phosphodiesterase 6A (PDE6A) (n = 10), Rhodopsin (RHO) (n = 7), Phosphodiesterase 6B (PDE6B) (n = 6), Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Channel Beta 1 (CNGB1) (n = 4), Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Channel Alpha 3 (CNGA3) (n = 4), Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 2 Group E Member 3 (NR2E3) (n = 4), Guanylate Cyclase 2D (GUCY2D) (n = 2), and Cyclic Nucleotide-Gated Channel Beta 3 (CNGB3) (n = 2). Blue–red FST threshold differences exhibited moderate group discrimination in uncorrected analysis, with rod–cone dystrophies averaging −8.35 ± 10.37 dB and cone dystrophies −11.20 ± 14.60 dB. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for blue–red difference was 0.74 (95% CI: 0.59–0.90), with 75% sensitivity and 70.4% specificity at a −10 dB cutoff. However, no chromatic FST parameter maintained statistical significance between groups after Bonferroni correction. Inter-eye FST correlation was high (r = 0.758, p < 0.001), supporting test reliability. Conclusions: Chromatic FST testing provides a practical and sensitive means to assess photoreceptor function in advanced inherited retinal dystrophies, particularly when standard electrophysiologic methods are uninformative. Although the blue–red threshold difference offers moderate discrimination between rod–cone and cone dystrophies in uncorrected analysis, no chromatic parameter reached statistical significance after adjustment for multiple testing. Chromatic FST should be considered a supplementary approach for clinical monitoring and therapeutic studies in advanced retinal dystrophies, with further validation needed in larger cohorts.
Biomedicines,
6 February 2026



