Objectives: This study aims to discuss the clinical, laboratory and genetic findings, and treatment options for six patients who were diagnosed with Blau syndrome (BS)/early-onset sarcoidosis (EOS). Patients and methods: The study included four patients (2 males,2 females; mean age 7 years; range 4 to 10 years) with EOS and two siblings (1 male, 1 female; mean age 10 years; range, 9 to 11 years) with BS. Age, age of initial symptoms, age of diagnosis; articular involvement, presence of uveitis, dermatitis, or fever, other organ involvement, laboratory findings, results of metabolic tests for mucopolysaccharidosis and mucolipidosis, results of genetic, pathologic, and immunologic tests, radiologic findings to evaluate skeletal dysplasia, and treatment options were collected. Results: The median age at diagnosis of all patients was 6 years (range, 1 to 10 years). Five patients had camptodactyly and bilateral boggy synovitis in the wrists and ankles, one had granulomatous inflammatory changes in the liver and kidney biopsy, and one had attacks of fever and granulomatous dermatitis. None had uveitis. The detected mutations in nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain containing 2 (NOD2) were P268S (rs2066842), M513T (rs104895473), R702W (rs2066844), V955I (rs5743291), H343Y (rs199858111), and M491L (16:50745293). The treatments of patients included corticosteroids, non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs, methotrexate, infliximab, adalimumab, anakinra, and canacinumab. Conclusion: Camptodactyly and boggy synovitis are important signs of BS/EOS. Methotrexate and tumor necrosis factor blockers are more effective in patients with predominantly articular symptoms. In patients 5 and 6 and their mother, we determined a novel M491L mutation in the NOD2 gene. Currently, this work is in progress towards identifying the pathogenesis and treatment options for this disease.
The effects of biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs) in the clinical course of COVID-19 on children with underlying rheumatologic diseases have not been fully demonstrated. To evaluate the course of COVID-19 infection in patients with rheumatic disease receiving bDMARD treatment. This was a retrospective, multicenter study conducted in pediatric patients infected by SARS-CoV-2 and under bDMARDs therapy. The study population consisted of 113 patients (72 female/41 male). The mean age of the patients was 12.87 ± 4.69 years. The primary diagnosis of the cohort was as follows: 63 juvenile idiopathic arthritis, 35 systemic autoinflammatory diseases, 10 vasculitides, and five cases of connective tissue diseases. The mean duration of the primary disease was 4.62 ± 3.65 years. A total of 19 patients had additional comorbid diseases. Thirty-five patients were treated with canakinumab, 25 with adalimumab, 18 with etanercept, 10 with infliximab, nine with tocilizumab, six with rituximab, four with anakinra, three with tofacitinib, and one with abatacept. The median exposure time of the biological drug was 13.5 months. Seventy-one patients had symptomatic COVID-19, while 42 were asymptomatic. Twenty-four patients required hospitalization. Five patients presented with MIS-C. The hospitalized patients were younger and had a shorter duration of rheumatic disease compared to ambulatory patients, although the difference was not statistically significant. Steroid usage, presence of fever, and dyspnea were more common among the hospitalized patients. A worsening in the course of both COVID-19 and current disease was not noticed under bDMARDs, however, to end with a strong conclusion multicentric international studies are required.
In this study, ultrasonographic measurement of fetal membranes was not found to be a useful marker for prediction of preterm birth. The findings of our study may help in understanding ultrasonographic changes in fetal membranes in normal pregnancies.
Objectives Colchicine is the fundamental treatment of familial Mediterranean fever (FMF). Still, 5–10% of patients are not in remission with colchicine treatment. A consensus could not be established for the definition of colchicine resistance in FMF. This study aimed to determine factors that help to predict colchicine resistance in pediatric FMF patients. Methods Patients with FMF that age of diagnosis was under 18 years old were included in our study. Fifty colchicine responsive and 33 colchicine-resistant patients were stratified as groups 1 and 2, respectively. Patients’ clinical and laboratory findings were evaluated. Logistic regression analysis was used to determine the risk factors of colchicine-resistant FMF. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis was used to identify and compare the predictive performances of colchicine-resistant FMF models. Results Homozygous exon 10 MEFV mutations were frequent in group 2 (Group 1: 34 (68%), group 2: 32 (97%), p = .013). Univariate analysis showed that the age of onset of symptoms, age of diagnosis, chronic arthritis, myalgia and diarrhea during attacks, and the number of attacks, high ISSF and Pras score, high C-reactive protein (CRP) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) values under colchicine treatment were risk factors for colchicine-resistant FMF. With multivariate analysis, the number of attacks (OR 1.418, CI (95%) 1.149–1.750, p = .001) and high ESR values (OR 1.129, CI (95%) 1.059–1.204, p<.001) were detected as independent risk factors for colchicine-resistant FMF. Conclusion The predictive factors were determined for pediatric colchicine-resistant FMF in our study. The results will help to early diagnosis and treatment of chronic inflammation in FMF.
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