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Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) in Turkey: Results of a nationwide multicenter study

Authors :
Derici, ÜLVER
Arici, M
Atagunduz, P
Erdogan, O
Cobankara, V
Akoglu, E
Cefle, A
Direskeneli, H
Oner, A
Ozmen, M
Keser, G
Tunc, E
Temel, M
Tuglular, S
Buyan, N
Goker, B
Kabasakal, Y
Kalman, S
Ozkaya, O
Yilmaz, E
Bakkaloglu, A
Oktem, F
Islek, I
Dusunsel, R
Pay, S
Gunduz, Z
Besbas, N
Akpolat, T
Dinc, A
Erken, E
Tirpan, K
Ozer, HTE
Birlik, M
Soyturk, M
Senturk, T
Demircin, G
Delibas, A
Bulbul, M
Bek, K
Poyrazoglu, MH
Sucu, A
Sirin, A
Bayraktar, Y
Apras, S
Calguneri, M
Duzova, A
Topaloglu, R
Ozen, S
Kav, T
Ozaltin, F
Simsek, H
Sivri, B
Tutar, E
Yalcinkaya, F
KASAPÇOPUR, Özgür
Ozdogan, H
Onen, F
Tatar, G
Akkoc, N
Kavukcu, S
Soylu, A
Akar, S
Ozguc, M
Dundar, M
Akar, E
Akar, N
Ozel, D
Yakupoglu, G
Tunca, M
Yucel, E
Gonen, SEVİM
Misirlioglu, M
Turkmen, M
Unsal, E
Arisoy, N
Emre, S
Gok, F
Caliskan, S
Gogus, F
Masatlioglu, S
Soylemezoglu, O
Sever, L
Saatci, U
Baskin, E
Korkmaz, C
Erdem, H
Akkok, N
Demirkaya, E
Gunesacar, R
Cakar, N
Altiok, O
Kara, N
Booth, DR
Kocak, H
Hawkins, PN
Touitou, I
Tekin, M
Aksentijevich, I
Matzner, Y
Arslan, S
Balaban, Y
Batman, F
Ozalp, S
Selcukbiricik, F
Sadikoglu, B
Kamali, S
Ekim, M
Ozkaya, N
Gul, A
Bilge, I
Koseoglu, HK
Coban, E
Balci, B
Bakkaloglu, SEVCAN AZİME
Ondokuz Mayıs Üniversitesi
Çukurova Üniversitesi
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2005.

Abstract

PubMedID: 15643295 Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive disease that is prevalent among eastern Mediterranean populations, mainly non-Ashkenazi Jews, Armenians, Turks, and Arabs. Since a large proportion of all the FMF patients in the world live in Turkey, the Turkish FMF Study Group (FMF-TR) was founded to develop a patient registry database and analyze demographic, clinical, and genetic features. The cohort was composed of 2838 patients (mean age, 23.0 ± 13.33 yr; range, 2-87 yr), with a male:female ratio of 1.2:1. There was a mean period of 6.9 ± 7.65 years from disease onset to diagnosis; the period was about 2 years shorter for each decade since 1981. Ninety-four percent of patients were living in the central-western parts of the country; however, their familial origins (70% from the central-eastern and Black Sea regions) reflected not only the ongoing east to west migration, but also the historical roots of FMF in Turkey. Patients' clinical features included peritonitis (93.7%), fever (92.5%), arthritis (47.4%), pleuritis (31.2%), myalgia (39.6%), and erysipelas-like erythema (20.9%). Arthritis, arthralgia, myalgia, and erysipelas-like erythema were significantly more frequent (p < 0.001) among patients with disease onset before the age of 18 years. Genetic analysis of 1090 patients revealed that M694V was the most frequent mutation (51.4%), followed by M680I (14.4%) and V726A (8.6%). Patients with the M694V/M694V genotype were found to have an earlier age of onset and higher frequencies of arthritis and arthralgia compared with the other groups (both p < 0.001). In contrast to other reported studies, there was no correlation between amyloidosis and M694V homozygosity in this cohort. However, amyloidosis was still remarkably frequent in our patients (12.9%), and it was prevalent (27.8%) even among the 18 patients with a disease onset after age 40 years. Twenty-two patients (0.8%) had nonamyloid glomerular diseases. The high prevalence of vasculitides (0.9% for polyarteritis nodosa and 2.7% for Henoch-Schönlein purpura) and high frequency of pericarditis (1.4%) were striking findings in the cohort. Phenotype II cases (those patients with amyloidosis as the presenting or only manifestation of disease) were rare (0.3% or less). There was a high rate of a past diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever, which suggested a possible misdiagnosis in children with FMF presenting with recurrent arthritis. To our knowledge, this is the largest series of patients with FMF reported from 1 country. We describe the features of the disease in the Turkish population and show that amyloidosis is still a substantial problem.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8275ed265855ed23240afe2a6f0825bd