Internal medicine
-
Objective Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) is the most frequent autoinflammatory syndrome, and its frequency is reported to be increasing in Japan. We studied the clinical features and genetic background of patients with FMF in our hospital. Methods We analyzed the clinical features and genomic variants of MEFV, as well as 10 genes related to other autoinflammatory syndromes, in 22 Japanese patients with FMF. ⋯ All cases in which the onset occurred before 20 years of age were classified as typical FMF. Conclusion The clinical features of FMF recorded in our hospital coincided with those from the Japanese national epidemiological survey of FMF in Japan. More than 30% of the patients with FMF had non-MEFV genes, related to other autoinflammatory syndromes, thereby suggesting that variants of these genes may act as a disease-modifier in FMF.