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Anakinra improves sensory deafness in a Japanese patient with Muckle-Wells syndrome, possibly by inhibiting the cryopyrin inflammasome

✍ Scribed by Takashi Yamazaki; Junya Masumoto; Kazunaga Agematsu; Nobukuni Sawai; Shinji Kobayashi; Tomonari Shigemura; Kozo Yasui; Kenichi Koike


Book ID
101650970
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
148 KB
Volume
58
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Muckle‐Wells syndrome (MWS) is a dominantly inherited autoinflammatory syndrome. Patients with MWS have a mutation in CIAS1, the gene encoding cryopyrin, a component of the inflammasome that regulates the processing of interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β). In this report we describe an 8‐year‐old Japanese girl with MWS who had symptoms of periodic fever, urticarial rash, conjunctivitis, arthropathy, and sensory deafness. Laboratory analysis of the patient's serum showed abnormally high concentrations of C‐reactive protein, serum amyloid A, and IL‐1β, and she had a heterozygous mutation in the CIAS1 gene, with C‐to‐T transversion at nucleotide position 778, encoding an arginine‐to‐tryptophan mutation at position 260 (R260W). Mononuclear cells (MNCs) isolated from the patient secreted large amounts of IL‐1β, without stimulation, and were highly sensitive to muramyldipeptide and lipopolysaccharide. After treatment with anakinra, laboratory results normalized, and clinical symptoms, including sensory deafness, disappeared, while MNCs appeared to remain activated. Thus, our case suggests that anakinra possibly affects the cryopyrin inflammasome and markedly improves the clinical and laboratory manifestations of MWS.