National Hospital Organization

government 📍 Tokyo, Japan
2
PFAPA Syndrome Publications
7
PFAPA Syndrome Researchers

Associated Institutions

Nagara Medical Center
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Kyoto Medical Center
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National Kyushu Medical Center
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Kobe Medical Center
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Osaka National Hospital
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Publications

Variables for differential diagnosis of familial Mediterranean fever: Multiple correspondence analysis of a large Japanese cohort.

Kishida D, Nakamura A, Yazaki M, Tsuchiya-Suzuki A, Ichikawa T , et al.
Modern rheumatology •

We investigated differential diagnoses that should be noted with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) and useful variables for differentiation in a large Japanese cohort. Patients aged ≥13 years who were clinically suspected of having FMF by Livneh criteria were studied 1 year after MEFV genetic testing. Patients ultimately diagnosed with other diseases were studied, and the association among each disease, patient characteristics, and clinical variables were analysed using multiple correspondence analysis. In total, 504 patients were included in this study; 34 (6.7%) were diagnosed with a disease other than FMF. The most common diagnosis was Behçet's disease, followed by periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease, myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), and infectious diseases. Although none of the non-FMF patients had exon 10 variants, some responded to colchicine treatment. Multiple correspondence analysis suggested that atypical symptoms such as stomatitis were associated with Behçet's disease and PFAPA syndrome, whereas characteristic situations such as disease onset ≥40 years were associated with MDS and infectious diseases. Careful follow-ups and reanalysis of the diagnosis should be performed for patients with atypical findings and no exon 10 variants, even if their symptoms meet the clinical criteria for FMF.

Case Report: Identification of a CARD8 variant in all three patients with PFAPA syndrome complicated with Kawasaki disease.

Nakamura H, Kikuchi A, Sakai H, Kamimura M, Watanabe Y , et al.
Frontiers in pediatrics •

Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA syndrome), and Kawasaki disease (KD) are both considered to be disorders of the innate immune system, and the potential role of inflammasome activation in the immunopathogenesis of both diseases has been previously described. Herein, we report the clinical courses of three patients who presented a rare combination of PFAPA syndrome and KD. Two patients who presented KD later developed the PFAPA syndrome, of whom one developed recurrent KD 2 years after the initial diagnosis. The third patient developed KD one year after the onset of PFAPA syndrome. The presence of both of these conditions within individual patients, combined with the knowledge that inflammasome activation is involved in both PFAPA syndrome and KD, suggests a shared background of inflammatory dysregulation. To elucidate the mechanism underlying shared inflammatory dysregulation, we investigated the roles of Nod-like receptors (NLRs) and their downstream inflammasome-related genes. All the patients had a frameshift variant in (CARD8-FS). A previous study demonstrated a higher frequency of CARD8-FS, whose product loses CARD8 activity and activates the NLRP3 inflammasome, in patients with the PFAPA syndrome. Additionally, the NLRP3 inflammasome is known to be activated in patients with KD. Together, these results suggest that the CARD8-FS variant may also be essential in KD pathogenesis. As such, we analyzed the variants among patients with KD. However, we found no difference in the variant frequency between patients with KD and the general Japanese population. We report the clinical courses of three patients with a rare combination of PFAPA syndrome and KD. All the patients had the CARD8-FS variant. However, we could not find a difference in the variant frequency between patients with KD and the general Japanese population. As the frequency of KD is much higher than that of PFAPA among Japanese patients, and the cause of KD is multifactorial, it is possible that only a small portion of patients with KD harbor CARD8-FS as a causative gene.