4.6 Article

Comparison of diagnostic criteria for children with familial Mediterranean fever

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 181, Issue 4, Pages 1661-1667

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00431-021-04370-y

Keywords

Diagnostic criteria; Familial Mediterranean fever; Pediatric; Recurrent polyserositis; Tel-Hashomer criteria

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This study compared the application of pediatric criteria, Tel-Hashomer criteria, and 2019 Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria in the diagnosis of FMF. The study found that the sensitivity and specificity of pediatric criteria were comparable to Tel-Hashomer criteria, and the Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria had high sensitivity and specificity.
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autoinflammatory disease characterized by recurrent attacks of fever and serositis. Diagnosis is made according to clinical findings and supported by genetic analysis. The most commonly used adult diagnostic criteria are the Tel-Hashomer criteria. Pediatric criteria for FMF diagnosis were described in 2009, but their reliability should be supported by additional reports. In this study, we aimed to compare the pediatric criteria and the Tel-Hashomer and 2019 Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria using our FMF cohort. A total of 113 patients diagnosed with FMF were included. Demographic features and laboratory findings were retrospectively collected from the patients' files. The patients were evaluated with the Tel-Hashomer, pediatric and Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria. At least two of five new pediatric criteria were as sensitive (89%) and specific (85%) as the Tel-Hashomer criteria (sensitivity 70%, specificity 96%). We also evaluated the Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria using our cohort and found a sensitivity of 94% and specificity of 91%. Conclusion: Using pediatric criteria for the diagnosis of FMF in children is a feasible and simple approach that can diagnose the disease based on at least two criteria. Therefore, our study supports the use of pediatric criteria in FMF diagnosis of children. Our results also confirm that the Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria can be successfully applied for the diagnosis of FMF due to their high sensitivity (94%) and specificity (91%). What is Known: center dot The FMF diagnosis is made according clinical findings and supported by genetic analysis. center dot The use of adult diagnostic criteria in pediatric FMF patients is controversial since classical clinical presentation is often absent in children. What is New: center dot Our study supports both the use of pediatric criteria and Eurofever/PRINTO classification criteria in clinical practice.

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