4.7 Review

Diagnosis and Management of the Cryopyrin-Associated Periodic Syndromes (CAPS): What Do We Know Today?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10010128

Keywords

CAPS; FCAS; MWS; CINCA; NOMID; hearing loss; urticarial-like rash; autoinflammatory disease; anti-IL-1 treatment

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CAPS are a group of disorders caused by NLRP3 gene variants, leading to excessive inflammasome activation and IL-1 beta overproduction. The spectrum includes mild, moderate, and severe phenotypes known as FCAS, MWS, and NOMID/CINCA. Diagnosis is challenging due to heterogeneous clinical presentations and genetic variants, and early diagnosis with targeted anti-IL-1 therapy is crucial for patient outcomes.
The cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) are usually caused by heterozygous NLRP3 gene variants, resulting in excessive inflammasome activation with subsequent overproduction of interleukin (IL)-1 beta. The CAPS spectrum includes mild, moderate, and severe phenotypes. The mild phenotype is called familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome (FCAS), the moderate phenotype is also known as Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS), and the neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID)/chronic infantile neurologic cutaneous articular syndrome (CINCA) describes the severe phenotype. The CAPS phenotypes display unspecific and unique clinical signs. Dermatologic, musculoskeletal, ocular, otologic, and neurologic disease symptoms combined with chronic systemic inflammation are characteristic. Nevertheless, making the CAPS diagnosis is challenging as several patients show a heterogeneous multi-system clinical presentation and the spectrum of genetic variants is growing. Somatic mosaicisms and low-penetrance variants lead to atypical clinical symptoms and disease courses. To avoid morbidity and to reduce mortality, early diagnosis is crucial, and a targeted anti-IL-1 therapy should be started as soon as possible. Furthermore, continuous and precise monitoring of disease activity, organ damage, and health-related quality of life is important. This review summarizes the current evidence in diagnosis and management of patients with CAPS.

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