## Abstract ## Objective Familial cold urticaria (FCU) and Muckle‐Wells syndrome (MWS) are dominantly inherited autoinflammatory disorders that cause rashes, fever, arthralgia, and in some subjects, AA amyloidosis, and have been mapped to chromosome 1q44. Sensorineural deafness in MWS, and provoca
Clinical and genetic heterogeneity among Spanish patients with recurrent autoinflammatory syndromes associated with the CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 gene
✍ Scribed by Juan I. Aróstegui; Anna Aldea; Consuelo Modesto; Maria Jesús Rua; Federico Argüelles; Maria Antonia González-Enseñat; Eduardo Ramos; Josefa Rius; Susana Plaza; Jordi Vives; Jordi Yagüe
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 128 KB
- Volume
- 50
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
To investigate the involvement of the CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 gene in 7 unrelated Spanish families with recurrent autoinflammatory diseases characterized by early onset, recurrent fever, and a chronic urticarial rash, in whom a clinical diagnosis of cryopyrin‐associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) is suspected.
Methods
Clinical symptoms, results of laboratory analyses, and data on previous treatments in members of the 7 families were recorded on a questionnaire specific for hereditary autoinflammatory diseases. All coding regions and intronic flanking boundaries of the CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 gene were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and sequenced.
Results
Five different missense mutations, including 2 de novo and 1 previously unreported mutation (R488K), were identified in exon 3 of the CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 gene in 5 of the 7 affected families. Expanded genetic analysis among the healthy individuals identified incomplete penetrance in 2 families. No mutations were found in 2 of the 3 patients with chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular (CINCA) syndrome/neonatal‐onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID).
Conclusion
The clinical data suggested a diagnosis of familial cold‐induced autoinflammatory syndrome in 3 families, CINCA/NOMID syndrome in 3 others, and a possible Muckle‐Wells syndrome, whereas mutational analysis showed different CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 missense mutations in 5 families. These data are consistent with a common molecular basis of these diseases and highlights the phenotypic heterogeneity among CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 gene–associated syndromes. The previously unreported mutation and the incomplete penetrance found in 2 families expand the genetic basis underlying these autoinflammatory syndromes. These findings should alert clinicians to the possible genetic basis of these conditions, even in the absence of a family history, in their attempts to establish an accurate diagnosis and the optimal therapeutic approach.
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