| Literature DB >> 27142780 |
Abstract
Mevalonate kinase deficiency (MKD), a very rare autosomal recessive autoinflammatory disease with multiple organ involvement, presents clinically as hyperimmunoglobulinemia D syndrome (HIDS), a less severe phenotype and more common form, and mevalonic aciduria (MVA), a more severe phenotype and rare form. MKD is characterized by recurrent febrile attacks that are frequently accompanied by lymphadenopathy, gastrointestinal symptoms, arthralgia, myalgia, skin rash, and aphthous ulcers. Patients with MVA also have intrauterine growth retardation, congenital defects (cataracts, shortened limbs, and dysmorphic craniofacial features), neurological disease, and failure to thrive. Mean age at onset of symptoms is within the first year of life. There is a delay by several years between symptom onset and diagnosis, which is in part attributable to the initial misdiagnosis due to the rarity and nonspecific clinical manifestations of disease. The frequency of recurrent febrile attacks is highest in childhood and gradually decreases after adolescence. MKD is associated with rare long-term complications such as type AA amyloidosis, joint contractures, abdominal adhesions, renal angiomyolipoma, and severe pneumococcal infections. Frequent febrile attacks significantly impair several aspects of patients' and caregivers' quality of life, with an adverse impact on patients' daily activities, education, and employment. Lifespan is generally normal for HIDS whereas MVA can be fatal in early childhood.Entities:
Keywords: Hereditary autoinflammatory diseases; Hyperimmunoglobulinemia D; Mevalonate kinase deficiency; Mevalonic aciduria; Rare diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27142780 PMCID: PMC4855321 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0091-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Summary of demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with MKD
| Author | van der Hilst et al. [ | Bader-Meunier et al. [ | Doglio et al. [ | Jeyaratnam et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | International HIDS Database | France/Belgium | Italy | International Eurofever Registry | |
| Study design | Retrospective follow-up | Retrospective follow-up | Prospective follow-up | Retrospective follow-up | |
| Study period | 1994–2007 | 1999–2010 | N/A | 2009–2011a | |
| Length of follow-up, years | 14 | Not specified | Long-term (not specified) | 11.5 | |
| Number of patients | 103 HIDS | 50 MKD | 56 MKD | 114 MKD | |
| Most common MVK mutation (allele frequency in patients) | p.Val377Ile (50 %) | p.Val377Ile (43 %) | p.Val377Ile (47 %) | p.Val377Ile (48 %) | |
| 2nd most common MVK mutation (allele frequency in patients) | p.Ile268Thr (15 %) | p.Ile268Thr (8 %) | N/A | p.Ile268Thr (13 %) | |
| Age of patients, years, median or mean ± SD (range) | 19 (2, 74) | 19.5 (0.6, 58) at last visit | 13.3 ± 8.5 at follow-up | 14a (1, 60)a | |
| % of patients aged <18 years | N/A | N/A | N/A | 63 %a | |
| Age at onset of symptoms, months, median or mean ± SD (range) | 6 (0, 120) | 4 (1 day, 240 months) | 10.5 ± 15.3 (1, 108) | 6 (~0, ~72)a | |
| % of patients who had the first attack within the first year of life | 78 % | N/A | N/A | 71 %b | |
| % of patients who had the first attack before the age of 5 years | N/A | 92 % | N/A | N/A | |
| Age at diagnosis, years, median (range) | 10 (<3 months, 52 years) | N/A | N/A | ~8a (~3 months, ~29 years)a | |
| Duration from onset to diagnosis, years, median (range) | 9.9 | N/A | N/A | 2.5a (0.1–8.3)a | |
| Disease duration, years, mean ± SD (range) | N/A | 24 (1, 55) from the onset to most recent assessment | 12.4 ± 8.7 | 13.1b at enrollment | |
| Sex, % of men | 50 % | 42 % | 52 % | 46 % | |
| Ethnicity | N/A | White, 69 % | N/A | Caucasian, 90 % | |
| Positive family history, % | N/A | N/A | N/A | 26 %a | |
| % of patients with >12 fever episodes/year | 44 %, aged 0–10 year | 76 % at the onset | N/A | N/A | |
| Number of fever episodes per year, mean ± SD (min, max) or median | N/A | N/A | 13.8 ± 5.4 (3, 30) at baseline | 12 | |
| Duration of fever episodes, days, mean (range) or median | N/A | 3.7 (1, 10) | N/A | 5 (3 to 7 in 81 % of the patients)b | |
| Precipitating factors of fever episodes, % | N/A | ||||
| Vaccination | 63 % for the 1st attack | N/A | 36 % | ||
| Infection | N/A | N/A | 17 % | ||
| Infection and/or vaccination | N/A | 42 % | N/A | ||
| Stress | Many cases (not specified) | N/A | 24 % | ||
| Signs and symptoms during febrile attacks, % | Estimated % | Estimated % | N/A | ||
| Gastrointestinal/abdominal | Onset | Cumulative | |||
| Abdominal pain | 85 % | 20 % | 63 % | 88 % | |
| Diarrhea | 72 % | 40 % | 69 % | 84 % | |
| Vomiting | 71 % | 11 % | 45 % | 69 % | |
| Hepatomegaly | 22 % | 25 % | 37 % | N/A | |
| Serositis | 19 % | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Pericarditis | N/A | 0 % | 4 % | N/A | |
| Lymphoid tissue | |||||
| Lymphadenopathy | 87 % | 38 % | 71 % | 84 %b | |
| Splenomegaly | 32 % | 32 % | 63 % | N/A | |
| Musculoskeletal | |||||
| Arthralgia | 84 % | 20 % | 67 % | 71 % | |
| Arthritis | 55 % | 6 % | 43 % | 28 % | |
| Myalgia | N/A | 0 % | 22 % | 57 % | |
| Cutaneous and mucocutaneous | |||||
| Skin lesions or maculopapular rash | 69 % | 43 % | 67 % | 39 % | |
| Aphthous ulcers or stomatitis | 49 % | 15 % | 43 % | 60 % | |
| Pharyngitis | N/A | N/A | N/A | 28 % | |
| General | |||||
| Cold chills | 63 % | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Headache | 63 % | 0 % | 12 % | 38 % | |
| Malaise | N/A | N/A | N/A | 65 % | |
| Weight loss | N/A | N/A | N/A | 66 % | |
| Fatigue | N/A | N/A | N/A | 63 % | |
| Mood disorders | N/A | N/A | N/A | 24 % | |
| Thrombocytopenia | N/A | 4 % | 4 % | N/A | |
| Macrophage activation syndrome | N/A | 0 % | 6 % | 1 % | |
| Associated long-term conditions, % | N/A | ||||
| AA amyloidosis | 3 % | 0 % | 5 % | ||
| Abdominal adhesions | 10 % | 6 % | N/A | ||
| Joint contractures | 4 % | N/A | N/A | ||
| Recurrent and/or severe infections | N/A | 27 % | N/A | ||
| Severe pneumococcal infections | 1 % | 6 % | N/A | ||
| Hypogammaglobulinemia | N/A | 6 % | N/A | ||
| Renal angiomyolipoma | N/A | 6 % | N/A | ||
| Cerebellar syndrome | N/A | N/A | 3 % | ||
| Seizures | N/A | N/A | 5 % | ||
| Mental retardation | N/A | 2 % | 4 % | ||
| Chronic neurologic, abdominal, renal, pulmonary, endocrine, cutaneous, ocular, or hematologic involvement, erosive polyarthritis, and/or Sjögren’s syndrome | N/A | 55 % | N/A | ||
| Biomarkers, median (range), % of the patients above the upper limit of the [normal value] | N/A | ||||
| WBC count, x109/L during fever episodes [4–8] | 15, ↑ in 100 % of the patients | 18 (7.5–59) | ↑ in 66 % of tested patients | ||
| CRP, mg/L during fever episodes [<5] | 163 (36–404), ↑ in 100 % of the patients | 157 (47–440), ↑ in 100 % of tested patients | ↑ in 94 % of tested patients | ||
| ESR mm/hour during fever episodes [<10] | 76, ↑ in 100 % of the patients | 64 (27–120), ↑ in 100 % of tested patients | ↑ in 98 % of tested patients | ||
| IgA, g/L [0.5–3.4] | 4.1, 64 % of tested patients >2.6 g/L | 4.8 (0.25–20.9), 57 % of tested patients >3 g/L | N/A | ||
| IgD, IU/mL [<100] | 400 (<0.8-5300), ↑ in 78 % of the patients | 760 (0–2500), ↑ in 88 % of tested patients | ↑ in 72 % of tested patients | ||
| Urinary mevalonic acid, mmol/mol creatinine during fever episodes [<1] | N/A | 17 (2.8–10000), ↑ in 100 % of tested patients | ↑ in 93 % of tested patients | ||
| Biomarkers, median (range), % of the patients below the limit of the [normal value] | |||||
| MVK activity, % of control cells [>25] | N/A | 2.6 (0–24), ↓ in 100 % of tested patients | N/A | N/A | |
Abbreviations: CRP C-reactive protein, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, HIDS hyperimmunoglobulinemia D syndrome, IgA immunoglobulin A, IgD immunoglobulin D, MKD mevalonate kinase deficiency, MVK mevalonate kinase, N/A data not available, WBC white blood cell
aFrom the Eurofever registry by Toplak et al. [10] with 104 MKD patients
bFrom the Eurofever registry by Ter Haar et al. [5] with 85 MKD patients
Response to treatment in 67 patients with MKD from the Eurofever registry and in combined data of 187 patients from a literature review (19 papers) by the Eurofever registry investigatorsa
| Medication | Data source | No. of patients | Treated patients | Complete response | Partial response | Failure | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | No. | % | No. | % | No. | % | |||
| NSAIDs | Eurofever | 67 | 39 | 58 % | 5 | 13 % | 25 | 64 % | 9 | 23 % |
| Corticosteroids | Eurofever | 67 | 33 | 49 % | 8 | 24 % | 22 | 67 % | 3 | 9 % |
| Literature | 187 | 56 | 30 % | 0 | 0 % | 35 | 63 % | 21 | 38 % | |
| Colchicine | Eurofever | 67 | 17 | 25 % | 0 | 0 % | 6 | 35 % | 11 | 65 % |
| Literature | 187 | 60 | 32 % | 1 | 2 % | 11 | 18 % | 48 | 80 % | |
| Statins | Eurofever | 67 | 11 | 16 % | 0 | 0 % | 3 | 27 % | 8 | 73 % |
| Literature | 187 | 31 | 17 % | 0 | 0 % | 10 | 32 % | 21 | 68 % | |
| Anakinra | Eurofever | 67 | 27 | 40 % | 6 | 22 % | 18 | 67 % | 3 | 11 % |
| Literature | 187 | 35 | 19 % | 12 | 34 % | 16 | 46 % | 7 | 20 % | |
| Canakinumab | Eurofever | 67 | 2 | 3 % | 1 | 50 % | 1 | 50 % | 0 | 0 % |
| Literature | 187 | 3 | 2 % | 2 | 67 % | 1 | 33 % | 0 | 0 % | |
| Rilonacept | Eurofever | 67 | 1 | 1 % | 0 | 0 % | 1 | 100 % | 0 | 0 % |
| Etanercept | Eurofever | 67 | 17 | 25 % | 1 | 6 % | 10 | 59 % | 6 | 35 % |
| Literature | 187 | 27 | 14 % | 6 | 22 % | 9 | 33 % | 12 | 44 % | |
| Infliximab | Eurofever | 67 | 1 | 1 % | 0 | 0 % | 0 | 0 % | 1 | 100 % |
| Adalimumab | Eurofever | 67 | 2 | 3 % | 0 | 0 % | 1 | 50 % | 1 | 50 % |
| Literature | 187 | 3 | 2 % | 1 | 33 % | 1 | 33 % | 1 | 33 % | |
Abbreviations: MKD mevalonate kinase deficiency, NSAIDs nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
aAdapted from ter Haar et al. [18]. Response to treatment was classified as complete remission, partial remission, failure or worsening. Complete remission was defined as no signs of active disease and the normalization of reported inflammatory markers, allowing for the persistence of sequelae. Some patients received more than one treatment