| Literature DB >> 32226166 |
Marcin Milchert1, Joanna Makowska2, Olga Brzezińska2, Marek Brzosko1, Ewa Więsik-Szewczyk3.
Abstract
Monogenic autoinflammatory diseases (AIDs, formerly known as hereditary periodic fever syndromes) cover a spectrum of diseases which lead to chronic or recurrent inflammation caused by activation of the innate immune system. The most common monogenic AID is familial Mediterranean fever. Monogenic autoinflammatory diseases are generally considered intracellular signalling defects. Some stereotypical knowledge may be misleading; e.g. monogenic AIDs are not exclusively found in children, family history is often negative, fever frequently is not a leading manifestation and frequency of attacks in adults is usually variable. Lack of genetic confirmation should not stop anti-inflammatory ex juvantibus therapy. The pattern of tissue injury in AIDs is basically different from that observed in autoimmunity. There is no autoaggression against organ-specific antigens, but substantial damage (amyloidosis, cachexia, premature cardiovascular disease) is secondary to long-lasting inflammation. The Polish national programme of anti-interleukin 1 treatment opens new possibilities for the treatment. However, monogenic AIDs are frequently misdiagnosed and more awareness is needed. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: amyloidosis; monogenic autoinflammatory diseases; recurrent fevers
Year: 2019 PMID: 32226166 PMCID: PMC7091486 DOI: 10.5114/reum.2019.91298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reumatologia ISSN: 0034-6233
Case presentations
| Case | Age at first manifes-tation (years) | Time from symptoms to diagnosis (years) | Frequency of seizure (per year) | Regularity of seizures | Duration of a single seizure (days) | Max. fever (°C) | Leading manifestations at seizure | Manifestations in periods between seizures | Complications | Max CRP (mg/l) | Max ESR (mm/h) | Family history | Genetic tests | Targeted treatment | Response to treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 | 20 | > 10 | Yes | 3–5 | 40 | Symptoms of peritonitis, diarrhoea, migrating arthritis, muscle pain, maculopapular rash | Absent | Absent (no amyloidosis) | 109 | 78 | Mother: arthritis in childhood, | Recessive mutation detected in brother | Ketoprofen in acute phase, chronically colchicine | Satisfactory |
| 2 | 20 (raised inflammatory markers), 50 (clinically evident) | 5 | 4-5 | No | 4–7 | 38.5 | Headache, symmetrical large joints pain, low back pain, weakness | Present but less expressed, chronic rise of CRP, neutrophilia, thrombocytosis, anaemia | Amyloidosis (rectum biopsy, absent from skin biopsies), sensineuronal hearing loss, arteriosclerosis | 171 | 100 | 3 unexplained deaths in infancy in uncles and aunts | No common mutations for FMF; no TRAPS in sequencing | Glucocorticosteroids, colchicine, NSAIDs, anakinra | Partial, progression of complications, short observation of anakinra |
CRP – C-reactive protein, Max – maximum, FMF – familial Mediterranean fever, TRAPS – tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 associated periodic syndrome, NSAID – non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
Tel Hashomer diagnostic criteria set for the diagnosis of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF)* [13]
| Major criteria | Minor criteria | Supportive criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Typical attacks | 1–3. Incomplete attacks involving 1 or more of the following sites: | 1. Family history of FMF |
The requirements for diagnosis of FMF are ≥ 1 major criteria, or ≥ 2 minor criteria, or ≥ 1 minor criterion plus ≥ 5 supportive criteria, or ≥ 1 minor criterion plus ≥ 4 of the 5 supportive criteria. Typical attacks are defined as recurrent (≥ 3 of the same type), febrile (rectal temperature of 38°C or higher, and short (lasting between 12 hours and 3 days). Incomplete attacks are defined as painful and recurrent attacks that differ from typical attacks in one or two features, as follows: 1) the temperature is normal or lower than 38°C; 2) the attacks are longer or shorter than specified (but not shorter than 6 hours or longer than a week); 3) no signs of peritonitis are recorded during the abdominal attacks; 4) the abdominal attacks are localized; 5) the arthritis is in joints other than those specified. Attacks are not counted if they do not fit the definition of either typical or incomplete attacks.
Fig. 1Case 2. Oral ulcers. Patient signed informed consent for publication of photos.
Types and typical presentations of monogenic autoinflammatory diseases
| Type of AID | Typical age at first manifestation | Mean time from symptoms to diagnosis (years) | Frequency of seizure | Regularity of seizures | Duration of a single seizure (days) | Fever (°C) | Main manifestations at seizure | Manifestations at periods between seizures | Complications | Mean CRP during attack (mg/l) | Mean CRP between attack (mg/l) | Inheritance | Genetic tests | Treatment | Response to treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FMF | < 20 | 1.8 [ | Every 4–8 weeks, can be induced | Possible | 1–3 | 38–41 with chills | Serositis, rash, monoarthritis, atypical (in Polish patients) | Signs absent; rarely chronic rise of CRP, neutrophilia, thrombocytosis, anaemia | Amyloidosis | 115 [ | 4 | AR, rarely AD pattern | MEF | Chronically colchicine, biologics | Usually satisfactory |
| MWS | Variable | 20.6 [ | Variable | Irregular | 1–3 or constant | Sometimes with chills, more frequent in children | Rash, conjunctivitis, arthralgia, strong pain of extremities, periodic weakness | Signs can be present, chronic rise of CRP, neutrophilia, thrombocytosis, anaemia | Amyloidosis, sensineuronal hearing loss | About 20 – regardless of exacerbation, (elevated in about 90% of patients) [ | AD | NLRP3/CIAS1, somatic mutations possible | Biologics | Variable | |
| TRAPS | < 20 | 5.8 [ | Variable (days-months intervals) | Irregular | 15 in severe disease, 5–9 in mild | > 38, max. 41, can be absent in adults [ | Arthralgia, localised muscle pain, migratory rash, conjunctivitis, eye lids oedema, stomach ache, vomiting, diarrhoea | Signs absent; rarely chronic rise of CRP, neutrophilia, thrombocytosis, anaemia | Amyloidosis | 95 | 25 | AD incomplete penetrance | TNFRSF1A | Cortico-steroids, biologics | Variable |
MF – familial Mediterranean fever, MWS – Muckle-Wells syndrome, TRAPS – tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 associated periodic syndrome. Data are presented analogically to Table I.
only fever ≥ 38°C accounts in auto-inflammatory diseases activity index (AIDAI)
by stress, infection, injury, etc.
calculated in 5 TRAPS patients.
Characteristics of selected monogenic autoinflammatory diseases
| Disease | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| FMF | Is caused by gain-of-function mutations in |
| CAPS | Cryopyrin gene mutation causes gain of inflammasome activation resulting in 3 different syndromes, classified as CAPS. Cryopyrin is currently termed NLRP3 (nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat containing family, pyrin domain-containing 3) – a scaffold protein. Patients with CAPS can be classified under one of three clinical syndromes. Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS) is the most common, but can overlap with the others. Age of onset of MWS is very different [ |
| TRAPS | TRAPS results from |
| MKD | Is caused by reduced mevalonate kinase (MVK) activity resulting from AR |
FMF – familial Mediterranean fever, CAPS – cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes, TRAPS – tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 associated periodic syndrome, MKD – mevalonate kinase deficiency (formerly named HIDS, hyperimmunoglobulin D syndrome).