ABSTRACT: PURPOSE: Alström syndrome (AS) is a rare monogenic autosomal recessively inherited disorder characterized by cone rod dystrophy and multiple organ dysfunction. Mutations in the Alström syndrome 1 (ALMS1) gene have been found to be causative for AS. The purpose of this study was to identify ALMS1 mutations and to assess the clinical features of Chinese patients with AS. METHODS: Detailed ocular and laboratory examinations were performed. Peripheral blood samples were collected from patients and their parents. Genomic DNA was extracted with a Qiagen kit. Exons and exon/intron junctions of ALMS1 were amplified with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and screened for mutations with Sanger sequencing. The results were compared with the ALMS1 transcript to exclude polymorphisms and confirm pathogenic mutations. RESULTS: Seven patients from five unrelated non-consanguineous families were diagnosed with AS. All patients had cone rod dystrophy with impaired visual acuity, photophobia, and nystagmus. Other clinical features, including sensorineural hearing loss, truncal obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes mellitus, renal and hepatic dysfunction, hyperlipidemia, hypothyroidism, mental retardation, acanthosis nigricans, and scoliosis, were present. Sequencing revealed two novel mutations, p.N3150Kfs2X and p.V3154Xfs, in patient 1; one novel mutation, p.N3672Ifs11X, and one previously reported nonsense mutation, p.R3703X, in patient 2; novel mutations p.S2479X and p.R3611Efs7X in patient 3; one novel homozygous mutation, p.S695X, in patients 4 and 5; and two novel mutations, p.H688HfsX and p.Q3147Qfs2X, in patients 6 and 7. These mutations were not present in 100 unrelated healthy Chinese control subjects. The patients' parents were heterozygous carriers of the mutant allele. CONCLUSIONS: Seven Chinese patients with AS showed typical ophthalmic features and multiple organ dysfunction. Novel loss of function mutations in the ALMS1 gene are the underlying genetic defects.