Tofacitinib suppresses disease activity and febrile attacks in a patient with coexisting rheumatoid arthritis and familial Mediterranean fever
Authors
Kevser Gök; Gizem Cengiz; Kemal Erol; Salih Ozgocmen;
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is the most common hereditary auto-inflammatory (periodic fever) syndrome, and usually successfully treated with colchicine. However, nearly 5-10% of FMF cases are resistant or intolerant to colchicine and treatment options are highly restricted in these cases. Biologics including anakinra, canakinumab, rilonacept, etanercept, infliximab, interferon-alpha, and tocilizumab are shown to have efficacy to control FMF attacks. Tofacitinib, a Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor, is an orally administered non-biologic disease modifying anti-rheumatic drug for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Herein we report a female patient with coexisting RA and colchicine resistant FMF whose FMF attacks and disease activity were completely controlled after treatment with tofacitinib, a small-molecule JAK3 inhibitor.
Kevser Gök
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Gizem Cengiz
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Kemal Erol
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Salih Ozgocmen
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Gizem Cengiz
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Kemal Erol
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,
Salih Ozgocmen
Erciyes University, Faculty of Medicine,