University Children’s Hospital Basel

healthcare 📍 Basel, Switzerland
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PFAPA Syndrome Publications
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PFAPA Syndrome Researchers

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Publications

Colchicine - an effective treatment for children with a clinical diagnosis of autoinflammatory diseases without pathogenic gene variants.

Welzel T, Wildermuth AL, Deschner N, Benseler SM, Kuemmerle-Deschner JB
Pediatric rheumatology online journal

Autoinflammatory diseases (AID) are rare chronic conditions with high disease burden, affecting children and adults. Clinically and genetically confirmed, AID can be effectively treated with targeted cytokine inhibition. In contrast, for patients with clinical AID symptoms without pathogenic gene variants, no treatment recommendations are available. Colchicine is approved and established as effective, safe and low-cost first-line therapy in Familial Mediterranean Fever. Up to now, efficacy data for colchicine in children with a clinical AID diagnosis without pathogenic gene variants are rare. This pilot study was performed to evaluate the effectiveness of colchicine in children with a clinical diagnosis of AID without pathogenic gene variants. A pilot cohort study of consecutive children with active clinical AID without pathogenic gene variants treated with colchicine monotherapy was performed between 01/2009 and 12/2018. Demographics, clinical and laboratory characteristics were determined serially. Colchicine dosing and safety were documented. Physician estimate of disease activity was captured on visual analogue scales (VAS). Complete response (PGA ≤2 plus CRP ≤0.5 mg/dL and/or SAA ≤10 mg/L) at last follow-up. partial/no response, flare characteristics and requirement for rescue therapies. Nonparametric comparison of disease activity measures. A total of 33 children were included; 39% were female. Median age at colchicine start was 3.8 years, median follow-up was 14.1 months. Clinical AID diagnoses included CAPS (24%), FMF (27%), PFAPA (43%) and unclassified AID (6%). At baseline, overall disease activity was moderate (PGA 4), inflammatory markers were elevated (CRP 12.1 mg/dL; SAA 289.2 mg/L), and 97% reported febrile flares. 55% achieved complete response, 35% showed partial response and 58% had no febrile flares at last follow-up. Inflammatory markers (SAA: p < 0.0001, CRP: p < 0.005) and disease activity (p < 0.0001) decreased significantly. Overall, 93% of children experienced improvement of flare characteristics. Colchicine was found to be effective and safe in children with a clinical AID diagnosis in the absence of pathogenic gene variants. Colchicine is a low-cost treatment option for non-organ threatening AID.

Suboptimal vaccination coverage of recommended vaccines among French children with recurrent autoinflammatory fever syndromes: a study from the Juvenile Inflammatory Rheumatism cohort.

Rollet-Cohen V, Mirete J, Dingulu G, Hofer F, Hofer M , et al.
Clinical rheumatology

To determine vaccination coverage among a French cohort of children with recurrent autoinflammatory fever syndromes (RFS). All RFS children aged 2 to 19 years from the Juvenile Inflammatory Rheumatism cohort and followed at the French Reference Center for Autoinflammatory Diseases, Versailles Hospital, were included in our observational study. Immunisation status at ages 2, 7 and 15 years and at the last outpatient visit was evaluated according to the standard French vaccine schedule and recommended supplementary vaccines for patients with immunosuppressive therapy. Of 200 patients, 90 (45%) had periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis and adenitis syndrome; 52 (26%) had familial Mediterranean fever and 50 (25%) had undefined recurrent fever. Complete immunisation as per the standard schedule was obtained by 32% of patients at 2 years, 28% at 7 years, 6% at 15 years and 44% at the last outpatient visit. Similar or higher coverage was obtained by the last outpatient visit for most vaccines, compared to immunisation coverage at 2 years: pneumococcus (91% vs 88%), diphtheria tetanus poliomyelitis (82% vs 86%), hepatitis B (79% vs 69%) and measles, mumps, rubella (91% vs 50%). No patients with immunosuppressive therapy (n = 14) were up to date for all supplementary immunisations recommended for them. Vaccination coverage for RFS children is suboptimal, especially for infants who present with recurrent febrile episodes. The initial vaccination delay is partially corrected through specialist follow-up in later years. Coverage according to the supplementary vaccine recommendations for immunosuppressed patients is poor. Key Points • Vaccination coverage for RFS children is suboptimal, especially at 2 years of age which is likely due to the prevalence of early recurrent febrile symptoms. • The initial vaccination delay is partially recovered during later follow-up at an expert rheumatology center. • Specific recommendations are particularly difficult to apply to patients on immunosuppressive therapy.

Colchicine Effectiveness and Safety in Periodic Fever, Aphthous Stomatitis, Pharyngitis, and Adenitis.

Welzel T, Ellinghaus M, Wildermuth AL, Deschner N, Benseler SM , et al.
Frontiers in pediatrics

Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA) is the most common fever syndrome in childhood. High disease activity (DA) dramatically impacts the health-related quality of life. Thus, effective and safe treatment is crucial. Colchicine might be effective, but data are still lacking. Study aimed to assess colchicine safety and effectiveness in PFAPA. This single center study was conducted between 03/2012 and 05/2021 in PFAPA patients without variants in genetic panel testing aged ≤ 18 years fulfilling Marshall criteria and classification criteria of Gattorno et al. Exclusion criteria were elevated liver enzymes, impaired kidney function, celiac disease, lactose intolerance, previous/ongoing biologics, known colchicine-intolerance. Demographics, clinical characteristics, treatment, DA, colchicine effectiveness and safety were recorded at baseline, first and last visit. Colchicine was started at 0.5-1.0 mg/day. DA was captured by physician (PGA) and patient/parent (PPGA) global assessment on a 10 cm visual analog scale, categorized as mild (<2), moderate (2-4), and high (≥5). Adverse event (AE) monitoring included gastrointestinal symptoms, liver enzyme/creatinine elevation, leukopenia, neutropenia. Primary outcome included response (R; composite of PPGA + PGA decrease ≥2) at last follow-up. Secondary outcomes were partial response (PR; PGA decrease = 1 + PPGA decrease ≥1), no response (NR; unchanged/worsened PGA/PPGA), colchicine safety, flare characteristics. Twenty-seven PFAPA patients were included, 52% were female, median age was 5.8 years (1-10.75), median follow-up time was 13 months. At baseline, median PPGA was high; median PGA moderate. All patients had febrile flares. Median flare frequency was every 4-5 weeks; median duration 5-6 days. Nine patients were pre-treated with corticosteroids, increasing flare frequency in 8/9. Primary Outcome: 17 patients (63%) were responders. Secondary outcomes: PR was achieved in 15%; NR in 22% at last follow-up. DA decreased significantly ( <0.0001). At last follow-up, 52% reported no flares, median flare duration decreased to 1-2 days. At first follow-up, 22% reported mild abdominal pain/diarrhea. Moderate abdominal pain/diarrhea occurred with ≥1 mg/day. Mild asymptomatic liver enzyme elevation or leucopenia were rare; no severe AE or colchicine discontinuation were observed. Colchicine seems to be safe, well-tolerated, and effective in PFAPA patients. It can be considered in children with moderate/high DA even those without corticosteroid-benefit.