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Can colchicine response be predicted in familial Mediterranean fever patients?
[familial mediterranean fever]
The
aims
of
this
study
were
to
explore
whether
the
demographic
and
clinical
features
of
paediatric
familial
Mediterranean
fever
(
FMF
)
patients
with
different
colchicine
response
vary
or
not
and
to
determine
whether
colchicine
response
can
be
predicted
in
FMF
patients
.
Files
of
patients
who
have
been
on
colchicine
therapy
for
at
least
6
months
were
retrospectively
evaluated
.
Patients
were
divided
into
two
groups
:
group
I
included
patients
with
no
attacks
after
colchicine
and
group
II
comprised
patients
with
ongoing
attacks
.
Thereafter
group
II
was
further
divided
into
two
groups
according
to
the
reduction
rate
of
attack
frequency
:
group
IIA
(
>
50
%
)
and
group
IIB
(
≤
50
%
)
.
The
study
group
comprised
221
FMF
patients
(
116
females
,
105
males
)
.
There
were
131
patients
in
group
I
and
90
patients
in
group
II
(
54
in
group
IIA
and
36
in
group
IIB
)
.
Leg
pain
and
M
694
V
homozygosity
were
more
frequent
in
group
II
(
P
<
0
.
05
)
.
Final
colchicine
doses
,
disease
severity
scores
and
number
of
patients
with
elevated
acute
phase
reactant
levels
(
attack-free
period
)
were
significantly
higher
and
colchicine
compliance
was
lower
in
group
II
when
compared
with
group
I
(
P
<
0
.
05
)
.
Erysipelas
-like
erythema
(
ELE
)
,
leg
pain
and
protracted
arthritis
/
protracted
febrile
myalgia
/
vasculitis
were
more
frequently
detected
in
group
IIB
(
P
<
0
.
05
)
.
Colchicine
response
is
excellent
in
the
majority
of
FMF
patients
,
however
,
colchicine
unresponsiveness
can
not
be
predicted
easily
at
onset
.
More
rarely
encountered
clinical
findings
such
as
ELE
,
leg
pain
and
protracted
complaints
and
M
694
V
homozygosity
may
be
a
clue
for
less
colchicine
response
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"reduction rate"
symptom
familial mediterranean fever
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