In their recent article, Cazeneuve et al investigated the diagnostic value of MEFV gene analysis in populations classically affected with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) (1). They concluded that a search for very few mutations is highly sensitive in the molecular diagnosis of MEFV-related FMF.
Familial Mediterranean fever among patients from Karabakh and the diagnostic value of MEFV gene analysis in all classically affected populations
✍ Scribed by Cécile Cazeneuve; Zaruhi Hovannesyan; David Geneviève; Hasmik Hayrapetyan; Stéphanie Papin; Emmanuelle Girodon-Boulandet; Brigitte Boissier; Josué Feingold; Karine Atayan; Tamara Sarkisian; Serge Amselem
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 101 KB
- Volume
- 48
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal‐recessive disorder that is common in Armenian, Turkish, Arab, and Sephardic Jewish populations. Its clinical diagnosis is one of exclusion, with the patients displaying nonspecific symptoms related to serosal inflammation. MEFV gene analysis has provided the first objective diagnostic criterion for FMF. However, in the absence of an identified mutation (NI/NI genotype), both the sensitivity of the molecular analyses and the involvement of the MEFV gene in FMF are called into question. The present study was designed to further evaluate the diagnostic value of MEFV analysis in another population of Mediterranean extraction.
Methods
The MEFV gene was screened for mutations in 50 patients living in Karabakh (near Armenia) who fulfilled the established criteria for FMF. In addition, we analyzed published series of patients from the above‐mentioned at‐risk populations.
Results
The mutation spectrum in Karabakhian patients, which consisted of only 6 mutations (with 26% of NI alleles), differed from that reported in Armenian patients. Strikingly, among patients from Karabakh and among all classically affected populations, the distribution of genotypes differed dramatically from Hardy‐Weinberg equilibrium (P = 0.0016 and P < 0.00001, respectively). These results, combined with other population genetics–based data, revealed the existence of an FMF‐like condition that, depending on the patients' ancestry, was shown to affect 85–99% of those with the NI/NI genotype.
Conclusion
These data illuminate the meaning of negative results of MEFV analyses and show that in all populations evaluated, most patients with the NI/NI genotype had disease that mimicked FMF and was unrelated to the MEFV gene. Our findings also demonstrate the high sensitivity of a search for very few mutations in order to perform a molecular diagnosis of MEFV‐related FMF.
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