Back to Search Start Over

Familial Mediterranean Fever

Authors :
Fumiaki Nonaka
Yoshikazu Nakamura
Yuka Jiuchi
Tomoko Toma
Hiroshi Furukawa
Akinori Nakamura
Chihiro Terai
Kiyoshi Migita
Masahide Yazaki
Yoshikazu Nakashima
Kazunaga Agematsu
Akihiro Yachie
Michio Yasunami
Ritei Uehara
Atsushi Kawakami
Katsumi Eguchi
Hiroaki Ida
Junya Masumoto
Tadashi Nakamura
Dai Kishida
Source :
Medicine
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2014.

Abstract

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autoinflammatory disease caused by MEditerranean FeVer gene (MEFV) mutations. In Japan, patients with FMF have been previously reported, including a mild or incomplete form. Several factors are presumed to contribute to the variable penetrance and to the phenotypic variability of FMF. We conducted the current study to investigate the correlation of variable clinical presentations and MEFV genotypic distributions in Japanese FMF patients. We analyzed demographic, clinical, and genetic data for 311 FMF patients enrolled in the study. Clinically, we classified FMF into 2 phenotypes: 1) the “typical” form of FMF, and 2) the “atypical” form of FMF according to the Tel Hashomer criteria. Patients with the typical FMF phenotype had a higher frequency of febrile episodes, a shorter duration of febrile attacks, more frequent thoracic pain, abdominal pain, a family history of FMF, and MEFV exon 10 mutations. Conversely, patients with the atypical FMF phenotype had a lower frequency of fever episodes and more frequent arthritis in atypical distribution, myalgia, and MEFV exon 3 mutations. Multivariate analysis showed that the variable associated with typical FMF presentation was the presence of MEFV exon 10 mutations. Typical FMF phenotype frequencies were decreased in patients carrying 2 or a single low-penetrance mutations compared with those carrying 2 or a single high-penetrance mutations (M694I), with an opposite trend for the atypical FMF phenotype. In addition, patients having more than 2 MEFV mutations had a younger disease onset and a higher prevalence of thoracic pain than those carrying a single or no mutations. Thus, MEFV exon 10 mutations are associated with the more typical FMF phenotype. In contrast, more than half of the Japanese FMF patients without MEFV exon 10 mutations presented with an atypical FMF phenotype, indicating that Japanese FMF patients tend to be divided into 2 phenotypes by a variation of MEFV mutations.

Details

ISSN :
00257974
Volume :
93
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f48d05d45a8c89ee1268c4e951878b0