de Moura R

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PFAPA Syndrome Publications

Deep Proteomics Analysis Unravels the Molecular Signatures of Tonsillar B Cells in PFAPA and OSAS in the Pediatric Population.

Kharrat F, Balasan N, Ura B, Golino V, Campiglia P , et al.
International journal of molecular sciences

Tonsils are secondary lymphoid organs that play a crucial role in the immunological response, with B cells being a major component involved in both innate and adaptive immunity. Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) are both common pediatric conditions involving tonsillar pathology. In both syndromes, the molecular pathways dysregulated in tonsillar B cells are still to be understood. The study aimed to unravel and compare the proteomic profiles of tonsillar CD19+ B cells isolated from pediatric patients with PFAPA (n = 6) and OSAS (n = 6) to identify disease-specific molecular signatures. B cells were isolated from the tonsillar tissue using magnetic microbeads (with a purity of 93.50%). Proteomic analysis was performed by nanoLC-MS/MS with both data-dependent (DDA) and data-independent acquisition (DIA) methods, followed by comprehensive bioinformatic analysis. By merging DDA and DIA datasets, a total of 18.078 unique proteins were identified. Differential expression analysis revealed 83 proteins increased and 49 proteins decreased in OSAS B cells compared to PFAPA B cells (fold change ≥ 1.5 or ≤0.6, < 0.05). Distinct pathway enrichments were highlighted, including alterations in the regulation of PTEN gene transcription, circadian gene expression, inflammasome pathways (IPAF and AIM2), and the metabolism of angiotensinogen to angiotensin. Specific proteins such as p53, Hdac3, RPTOR, MED1, Caspase-1, Cathepsin D, Chymase, and TLR2 (validated by WB) were shown to be differentially expressed. These findings reveal distinct proteomic signatures in tonsillar B cells from patients with PFAPA and OSAS, offering novel insights into the pathophysiology and potential avenues for biomarker discovery.

Guidelines for the management and treatment of periodic fever syndromes: periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis and adenitis syndrome.

Terreri MT, Bernardo WM, Len CA, da Silva CA, de Magalhães CM , et al.
Revista brasileira de reumatologia

To establish guidelines based on scientific evidence for the management of periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis and adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome. The Guideline was prepared from 5 clinical questions that were structured through PICO (Patient, Intervention or indicator, Comparison and Outcome), to search in key primary scientific information databases. After defining the potential studies to support the recommendations, these were graduated considering their strength of evidence and grade of recommendation. 806 articles were retrieved and evaluated by title and abstract; from these, 32 articles were selected to support the recommendations. 1. PFAPA is a diagnosis of exclusion established on clinical grounds, and one must suspect of this problem in children with recurrent and periodic febrile episodes of unknown origin, or with recurrent tonsillitis interspersed with asymptomatic periods, especially in children in good general condition and with preservation of weight and height development. 2. Laboratory findings are nonspecific. Additional tests do not reveal pathognomonic changes. 3. The evidence supporting an indication for surgical treatment (tonsillectomy with or without adenoidectomy), is based on two non-blinded randomized clinical trials with small numbers of patients. 4. The use of prednisone at the onset of fever in patients with PFAPA proved to be an effective strategy. There is still need for more qualified evidence to support its use in patients with PFAPA. 5. Despite promising results obtained in studies with IL-1β inhibitors, such studies are limited to a few case reports.