Autoinflammatory Conditions

autoinflammatory diseases

 

Autoinflammatory diseases are a relatively new category of diseases that are different from autoimmune diseases. However, autoimmune and autoinflammatory diseases share common characteristics in that both groups of disorders result from the immune system attacking the body’s own tissues, and they also result in increased inflammation.  This short video gives a quick explanation

It is important not to confuse autoinflammatory syndromes with autoimmune diseases, such as Lupus, Rheumatoid Arthritis and others that are caused by the body’s adaptive immune system developing antibodies to antigens that then attack healthy body tissues.

Autoinflammatory diseases are not contagious. When patients are having flares of their disease symptoms they cannot infect anyone, even if they are having a fever, rash, non-infectious conjunctivitis, vomiting, diarrhea or other symptoms that can be confused as an illness. These symptoms are triggered by the autoinflammatory disease, which in most cases are caused by genetic mutations. It is important to distinguish disease flares from infectious diseases.

In general, autoinflammatory disease flares follow a characteristic pattern each time that they occur, such as The length of time with the fever, the accompanying symptoms, increases in inflammatory labs during flares, including elevated C-reactive protein (CRP), and Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR). In some conditions, such as PFAPA, patients can get flares that occur around the same time every few weeks. Other autoinflammatory diseases may have a more sporadic and unpredictable flare pattern, or they may be triggered by certain factors, such as exposure to cold or cooling temperatures leading to flares of symptoms in patients with CAPS.

This overview contains general information on the immune system and provides brief descriptions of some of the more common autoinflammatory diseases.

The Immune System

When your body is attacked – perhaps by a virus or other germs – your immune system defends you. It “sees” and kills the germs that might hurt you.

But when the system doesn’t work right, this process can cause harm. Immune cells can mistake your body’s own cells as invaders and attack them. This “friendly fire” can affect almost any part of the body. It can sometimes affect many parts of the body at once. This is called “autoimmunity” (meaning “self-immunity”).

The part of the immune system that orchestrates all of this develops as a person grows and is known as the acquired immune system. It “remembers” foreign antigens, or proteins, so that it can fight them if they come back. It employs white blood cells called lymphocytes.

But the body also has an innate (inborn) immune system that is more primitive. It employs types of white blood cells called granulocytes and monocytes to destroy harmful substances. In autoinflammatory diseases, this innate immune system causes inflammation for unknown reasons. It reacts, even though it has never encountered autoantibodies or antigens in the body.

Autoinflammatory disorders are characterized by intense episodes of inflammation that result in such symptoms as fever, rash, or joint swelling. These diseases also carry the risk of amyloidosis, a potentially fatal buildup of a blood protein in vital organs.

There are several different types of autoinflammatory diseases.

Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF)

People with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) suffer from recurring bouts of fever, most commonly with severe abdominal pain due to inflammation of the abdominal cavity (peritonitis). Attacks can also include arthritis (painful, swollen joints), chest pain from inflammation of the lung cavity (pleurisy), and skin rashes.

FMF usually begins in childhood and occurs most commonly in people of Jewish, Armenian, Arab, and Turkish backgrounds living in the United States and abroad. As many as 1 in 200 to 1,000 people in these populations have the disease. Mutations in the MEFV gene cause FMF. The gene holds the code for making a protein known as pyrin. The pyrin protein, named from the Greek word for fire, bears a strong resemblance to several proteins found in the nucleus of cells. Some of these proteins are known to regulate inflammation. Usually a person must inherit two mutated copies of the gene – one from each parent – to get FMF. However, recent studies have shown that under some circumstances, one copy is enough to cause disease.

Colchicine – a medication also approved to treat gout (a form of arthritis) – has been used successfully as a treatment for FMF. Colchicine reduces inflammation throughout the body.

Neonatal Onset Multisystem Inflammatory Disease (NOMID)

Neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID), also known as chronic infantile neurologic cutaneous articular (CINCA) syndrome, affects numerous organs and body systems, including the skin, joints, eyes, and central nervous system. For most children, the first sign of the disease is a rash that develops within the first 6 weeks of life. Other problems, including fever, meningitis, joint damage, vision and hearing loss, and mental retardation, can follow.

Although the mechanism of NOMID is not completely understood, research has revealed mutations in a gene called NLRP3 (formerly known as CIAS1) in approximately 60 percent of patients with the disease. A person only needs to have one abnormal copy of the gene to get the disease. NLRP3 encodes cryopyrin and belongs to a group of interacting proteins involved in regulating inflammation and programmed cell death, which plays a crucial role in ridding the body of cells that are no longer needed. The mutations, scientists have found, lead to an imbalance of a cytokine, or chemical messenger, called interleukin-1 (IL-1), which is believed to drive the increased inflammation that causes damage in patients with the disease.

People with NOMID usually respond well to anakinra, a drug that blocks IL-1 action and is also approved for rheumatoid arthritis. Anakinra results in marked improvement both in symptoms and the inflammation underlying the disease.

Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) Receptor-Associated Periodic Syndrome (TRAPS)

TRAPS (tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome), formerly known as familial Hibernian fever, is characterized by long, dramatic, episodes of high fever; severe pain in the abdomen, chest, or joints; skin rash; and inflammation in or around the eyes. The age of onset varies from early childhood to adulthood, and the disease appears to affect men and women equally. The earliest cases of TRAPS were reported in individuals of Irish-Scottish descent, but the disease has since been found in nearly all ethnic groups.

TRAPS is caused by a mutation of the TNFRSF1A gene. A person only needs one abnormal copy of the gene to get the disease. Episodes can be triggered by infection or stress. Although a definitive treatment for TRAPS has yet to be identified, drugs known as TNF inhibitors are sometimes successful in treating the disease.

Deficiency of the Interleukin-1 Receptor Antagonist (DIRA)

Deficiency of the interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor antagonist (DIRA) is a recently discovered autoinflammatory disease. Children with the disorder display a constellation of serious and potentially fatal symptoms that include swelling of bone tissue; bone pain and deformity; inflammation of the periosteum (a layer of connective tissue around bone); and a rash that can span from small individual pustules to extensive pustulosis that covers most of the patient’s body. Most of the children begin to have symptoms from birth to 2 weeks of age.

Children with DIRA have inherited mutations in IL1RN, a gene that encodes a protein known as IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra). IL-1Ra binds to the same cell receptors as the inflammatory protein IL-1 and blocks its inflammatory actions. Without IL-1Ra, the children’s bodies cannot control systemic inflammation that can be caused by IL-1. Although mutations that cause DIRA are rare, as many as 2.5 percent of the population of northwest Puerto Rico are carriers. Since DIRA is recessively inherited, these data suggest that it may be present in about 1 in 6,300 births in this population. Mutations may also be more common in individuals of Dutch descent.

Most patients with DIRA respond well to anakinra, the same drug previously mentioned for NOMID treatment, a synthetic form of human IL-1Ra.

Chronic Atypical Neutrophilic Dermatosis With Lipodystrophy and Elevated Temperature (CANDLE)

CANDLE is another recently discovered autoinflammatory disease characterized predominantly by inflammation and fat loss. It represents a spectrum of diseases that have been described in the literature under a variety of names.

Although the mechanism of CANDLE is not completely understood, most patients have mutations in the PSMB8 gene. PSMB8 is one of more than 20 components involved in making a cellular structure called a proteasome, which recycles proteins from cells that are stressed or dying. When the proteasome doesn’t function, there is a buildup of protein waste products in the cells.

Symptoms of CANDLE generally develop during the first year of life and may include recurrent fevers, purpura, joint pain, contractures, and developmental delay. Patients also experience facial changes, including a loss of fat on the face, and swollen lips and eyelids.

Behçet’s Disease

Behçet’s disease causes canker sores or ulcers in the mouth and on the genitals and inflammation in parts of the eye. In some people, the disease also results in arthritis, skin problems, and inflammation of the digestive tract, brain, and spinal cord.

Behçet’s disease is common in the Middle East, Asia, and Japan; it is rare in the United States. In Middle Eastern and Asian countries, the disorder affects more men than women. In the United States, the opposite is true. Behçet’s disease tends to develop in people in their twenties or thirties, but people of all ages can develop it.

The exact cause of Behçet’s disease is unknown. Most symptoms of the disorder are caused by inflammation of the blood vessels. Doctors think that an autoinflammatory reaction may cause the blood vessels to become inflamed, but they do not know what triggers this reaction. Corticosteroids and immunosuppressive drugs are commonly used to treat the disease.

Progress and Promise

For a listing of federally and privately supported clinical trials for a variety of autoinflammatory disorders, visit www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Key Words

Acquired immune system. The part of the immune system that develops as a person grows. It employs antibodies to fight harmful substances.

Amyloidosis. A potentially fatal buildup of a blood protein in vital organs.

Anakinra. An anti-inflammatory medication that is sometimes used for rheumatoid arthritis.

Antibody. A special protein produced by the body’s immune system that recognizes and helps fight infectious agents and other foreign substances that invade the body.

Antigen. A foreign substance that triggers the production of antibodies when it is introduced into the body.

Autoantibody. An antibody that attaches to the body’s own healthy tissues by mistake and signals the body to destroy them.

Autoimmune disease. A disease that results when the immune system mistakenly attacks the body’s own tissues.

Autoinflammatory disease. A disease that results when the innate immune system causes inflammation for unknown reasons.

Behçet’s disease. An autoinflammatory disease that causes canker sores or ulcers in the mouth and on the genitals and inflammation in parts of the eye.

Chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature (CANDLE). An autoinflammatory disease linked to mutations in the PSMB8 gene.

Colchicine. An anti-inflammatory medication commonly used to treat gout.

Cryopyrin. A protein involved in regulating inflammation and programmed cell death.

Deficiency of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (DIRA). An autoinflammatory disease caused by a deficiency of the protein interleukin-1 receptor antagonist.

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF). An autoinflammatory disease caused by mutations in the MEFV gene.

Immune system. A complex network of specialized cells and organs that work together to defend the body against attacks by foreign invaders, such as bacteria and viruses.

Innate immune system. The part of the immune system that is more primitive. It employs types of white blood cells called granulocytes and monocytes to destroy harmful substances.

Neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID). An autoinflammatory disease associated with mutations in a gene called NLRP3 (formerly known as CIAS1) in approximately 60 percent of patients with the disease.

Pyrin. A protein involved in regulating inflammation.

Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS). An autoinflammatory disorder caused by a mutation of the TNFRSF1A gene.

Thanks to the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases and the amazing Autoinflammatory Alliance for this information.