Aktay Ayaz N

Bursa Uludağ Üni̇versi̇tesi̇

3
Publications
27
h-index
(3,101 citations, 330 total works)

Research Topics

Autoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders Research (131) Inflammasome and immune disorders (105) Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare (41) Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Research (38) Kawasaki Disease and Coronary Complications (37)

PFAPA Syndrome Publications

Exploring factors for predicting colchicine responsiveness in children with PFAPA.

Özaslan Z, Şen A, Uçar SA, Çakan M, Sanisoğlu B , et al.
European journal of pediatrics

Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis syndrome (PFAPA) are the most common autoinflammatory syndromes in children. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical and laboratory parameters that may predict colchicine responsiveness.This retrospective, multicenter, cross-sectional study involved nine pediatric rheumatology centers from our country., The patients diagnosed with PFAPA were compared on the basis of their responses to colchicine. In the 806 (42.3% female 57.7% male) patients, the most common clinical findings were fever (100%), exudative tonsillitis (86.5%), pharyngitis (80.9%), and aphthous stomatitis (50.5%). The mean attack frequency was 13.5 ± 6.8 attacks per year lasting for a mean of 3.9 ± 1.1 days. Colchicine treatment was attempted in 519 (64.4%) patients, with 419 (80.7%) showing a favorable response. In patients who underwent MEFV gene analysis (70.8%), the most common variant was M694V heterozygous (16.8%). The presence of pharyngitis (p = 0.03, 95% CI 0.885 to 0.994), the presence of arthralgia (p = 0.04, 95% CI 0.169 to 0.958), and having more frequent attacks (p = 0.001, 95% CI 0.028 to 0.748) were found to be associated with colchicine unresponsiveness, whereas the carriage of the M694V variant (p = 0.001, 95% CI 0.065 to 0.242) was associated with colchicine responsiveness. This study identified the presence of pharyngitis, arthralgia, and increased attack frequency in patients with PFAPA as factors predicting colchicine unresponsiveness, whereas the carriage of the M694V variant emerged as a predictor of colchicine responsiveness. Predicting colchicine response at disease onset may facilitate a more effective management of PFAPA. • Colchicine treatment can be used in the prophylaxis of PFAPA disease. • Having the MEFV variant is the most commonly known factor in predicting response to colchicine. • The presence of pharyngitis or arthralgia, and more frequent attacks in PFAPA disease were found to be independently associated with colchicine unresponsiveness. • Carrying the M694V variant was identified as the sole factor predicting colchicine responsiveness.

A novel assessment tool for clinical care of patients with autoinflammatory disease: juvenile autoinflammatory disease multidimensional assessment report.

Konukbay D, Gattorno M, Yildiz D, Frenkel J, Acikel C , et al.
Clinical and experimental rheumatology

To develop and test a new multidimensional questionnaire for assessment of children with auto-inflammatory disease (AID) such as FMF, PFAPA, HIDS, TRAPS in standard clinical care. The juvenile auto-inflammatory disease multidimensional assessment report (JAIMAR) includes 16 parent or patient-centered measures and four dimensions that assess functional status, pain, therapeutic compliance and health-related quality of life (physical, social, school, emotional status) with disease outcome. It is proposed for use as both a proxy-report and a patient self-report, with the suggested age range of 8-18 years for use as a self-report. 250 children with FMF were included in the study. Total of 179 forms were filled up by parents and patients, and 71 forms were filled up by parents having children less than 8 years. Completing and scoring the JAIMAR can be done in 15 minutes. For the JAIMAR's dimensions, the Cronbach's alpha coefficient for internal consistency was between 0.507-0.998. There was a significant and a positive correlation between the test-retest scale scores (ICC=0.607-0.966). Concerning construct validity, all factors loadings were above 0.30. For the criterion validity, the correlation level between each dimension and the related scale ranged from medium (r=0.329, p<0.0001) to large (r=0.894, p<0.0001). The parents' proxy-reported and children's self-reported data were outstandingly concordant (r=0.770-0.989). The development of the JAIMAR introduces a new and multi-dimensional approach in paediatric rheumatology practice. It is a new tool for children with auto-inflammatory dis-ease and it may help enhance their quality of care.