Familial Mediterranean fever

From IDWiki

Background

Types

  • Type 1: acute attacks of fever plus the classical symptoms of painful serositis and arthritis
  • Type 2: kidney amyloidosis, without other symptoms of FMF and without fever attacks
  • Type 3: patients with two mutations of MEFV gene, without fever, other symptoms of FMF, nor amyloidosis

Epidemiology

  • First found among Armenians, Arabs, Turks, and non-Ashkenazi Jews in North Africa and Iraq, but now also known to be found in Ashkenazi Jews, Italians, and other Mediterranean people
  • Rarely found in people without Mediterranean ancestry

Clinical Manifestations

  • Attacks consist of fever (96%), abdominal pain (90%), arthritis (45%), aphthous changes in lips and oral mucosa, erysipelas-like erythema (7-40%), and headache
    • Fever up to 40ºC, may be preceded by chills
    • Abdominal pain either diffuse or localized, may mimic acute abdomen or appendicitis, but can also cause intestinal obstruction
      • May have unnecessary surgery or laparoscopy
      • May have diarrhea or vomiting, or constipation
    • Arthritis is usually monoarticular in the large joints of the lower limbs and may last longer than other attacks
    • Myalgias usually in the legs
    • Pericarditis or pleuritis
    • Headache from aseptic meningitis
    • Unilateral acute scrotal inflammation in prepubertal boys
    • May have prodrome of myalgias, arthralgias, lumbar pain, headache, dyspnea, nausea, asthenia
    • Length of episodes 24 to 72 hours, occuring every 1 week to 1 decade
  • Elevated CRP, ESR, serum amyloid A, leukocytosis and neutrophilia
  • Onset usually before age 20 years
  • Severity of attacks is inversely proportional to the age at onset (earlier is more severe)
  • Attacks may be triggered by infections, stress, menses, exposure to cold, fat-rich food, or drugs
    • Pregnancy may be protective

Differential Diagnosis

Diagnosis

  • Requires clinical criteria confirmed by genetic testing

Tel Hashomer Criteria

  • Must exclude other causes
  • Must meet two major criteria, or one major and two minor criteria
  • Major criteria
    • Recurrent febrile episodes accompanied by peritonitis, synovitis, pleurisy
    • AA amyloidosis without a predisposing disease
    • Response to continuous colchicine administration
  • Minor criteria
    • Recurrent febrile episodes
    • Erysipelas-like erythema
    • FMF diagnosed in a first-degree relative

Turkish FMF Paediatric Criteria

  • Must meet at least two out of five criteria:
    • Fever >38ºC
    • Abdominal pain
    • Chest pain
    • Oligoarthritis
    • Family history of FMF
  • Duration of the symptoms must be 6 to 72 hours, ≥3 hours

Management

  • Goal is to reduce recurrence of attacks, normalize inflammatory markers, and minimize subclinical inflammation
  • First-line treatment is colchicine 0.5 to 1 mg/day for at least 3 to 6 months to determine efficacy
    • Can start ≤0.5 mg/day if younger than 5 years, 0.5-1 mg/day for 5-10 years old, 1-1.5 mg/day for children >10 years and adults
    • May be gradually titrated up to 2 mg/day in children or 3 mg/day in adults
  • May need NSAIDs or corticosteroids for arthritis and myalgias
  • Second-line treatments include corticosteroids and IL-1β inhibitors like canakinumab