Prague Med. Rep. 2014, 115, 128-133

https://doi.org/10.14712/23362936.2014.43

Acute Hepatitis in a Child Heterozygous for the I259V MEFV Gene Variant

Flora Tzifi1, Philip Hawkins2, Erato Atsali1, Doxa Kotzia1, Achilleas Attilakos1

1Third Department of Pediatrics, University of Athens, “Attikon” Hospital, Athens, Greece
2National Amyloidosis Center, Division of Medicine, UCL Medical School, Royal Free Hospital, London, United Kingdom

Received June 11, 2014
Accepted November 18, 2014

Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) is a systemic auto-inflammatory disease characterized by recurrent episodes of fever accompanied by synovial, serosal and/or cutaneous inflammation. Liver involvement has been described mainly in patients with paired FMF gene mutations, i.e. involving both alleles, and rarely in patients heterozygous for FMF mutations. These patients may present with acute or chronic hepatitis, with or without liver failure. Non-alcoholic hepatitis, mild hyperbilirubinemia, and elevation of liver enzymes of unknown etiology should also raise suspicion of FMF. Patients with FMF and liver involvement usually respond to colchicine medication. The mutation I259V (c.775A<G) on exon 2 of the MEFV gene has not been reported in FMF patients with liver involvement. Furthermore, among several MEFV gene variants, it has been reported so far in only one heterozygous FMF patient of Turkish ancestry presenting with abdominal pain without any hepatic complication. Herein, the second case of a FMF patient heterozygous for the above mentioned mutation is discussed. It is a male child with FMF clinical phenotype which presented two consecutively episodes of acute hepatitis during fever attacks, that spontaneously resolved. Therapeutic trial with colchicine was successful, since no other fever attacks and acute hepatitis episodes were noticed.

References

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