Author: Dr Jacqueline K. Nguyen, St Vincent’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia (2023) Previous contributors: Dr Delwyn Dyall-Smith, Dermatologist (2011) Reviewing dermatologist: Dr Ian Coulson
Familial cold autoinflammatorysyndrome (FCAS) is a rare autosomal dominant autoinflammatory disease that presents with episodic rash, fever, arthralgias, and fatigue upon generalised exposure to the cold.
FCAS is the mild phenotype compared to MWS (moderate phenotype) and NOMID/CINCA (severe phenotype).
Transientannularmacularerythema 2 hrs after cold exposure
Close up of transient annular macular erythema 2 hrs after cold exposure
Who gets familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
FCAS is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern. Children of an affected parent have a 50% chance of inheriting the disease.
Onset of symptoms has been reported from birth. The mean age of presentation is 47 days old, and 95% of affected individuals present by 6 months of age. In rare cases, symptom onset may occur during young adulthood. FCAS is a lifelong condition.
FCAS is extremely rare with an estimated prevalence of 1:1,000,000. It is primarily reported in families of North American and European descent and is seen equally in females and males.
What causes familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
FCAS results from a gain of function mutation in the NLRP3gene which encodes cryopyrin on chromosome 1q44. This leads to the activation of the cryopyrin inflammasome, causing uncontrolled inflammation through the inappropriate release of cytokines including interleukin 1-beta (IL-1β). This results in the inflammatory symptoms of FCAS.
Generalised cold exposure is a trigger for the symptoms of FCAS. The mechanism of temperature dependence is still being studied, but monocytes in patients with FCAS showed enhanced release of cytokine IL-1 on exposure to subnormal temperatures.
What are the clinical features of familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
FCAS is characterised by acute, episodic attacks of fever with rash following generalised exposure to cold. The average delay from cold exposure to onset of symptoms is 2.5 hours. Episodes usually last less than 24 hours (on average ~12 hours) and settle spontaneously.
Clinical features of an acute episode may include:
Rash (100%):
Often the first sign of FCAS, appearing soon after birth or in early infancy
While traditionally described as urticaria-like, it is often a non-urticarial, non-pruritic, red maculopapular rash with faint pink figurate patches
Petechiae have also been described
The rash often presents first on the extremities alone (45% of cases), the extremities and face (30%), and the extremities and buttocks (11%), followed by generalisation to the rest of the body in most patients.
What are the complications of familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
Amyloidosis is a rare complication that occurs in less than 2% of patients with FCAS and can lead to end-stage renal failure.
The lifelong occurrence of episodic attacks can affect daily activities, mental health, and quality of life.
How is familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome diagnosed?
Diagnosis of FCAS is primarily clinical, based on a history of episodic febrile attacks and rash following generalised cold exposure.
Due to the autosomal dominant inheritance pattern, diagnosis can be accelerated by monitoring children with a known family history of FCAS.
Genetic testing can be performed by NGS (next-generation sequencing) or Sanger sequencing to detect mutations in the NLRP3 gene.
Laboratory findings may include:
Chronicleukocytosis
Acute increase in serum interleukin 6 (IL-6) levels and neutrophils (neutrophilia) during a flare
Elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR).
Skin biopsy shows dermaloedema with neutrophilinfiltration in the dermis, particularly perivascular and peri-eccrine.
What is the differential diagnosis for familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
Acquired cold urticaria — often confused with FCAS, although they are distinct syndromes; in cold urticaria, the ice cube test is positive (this is negative in FCAS)
Neonatal onset multisystem inflammatory disease / chronic infantile neurologicalcutaneous and articular syndrome (NOMID/CINCA) — more systemic and severe symptoms than FCAS with central nervous system involvement (eg, development delay, seizures, and sensorineural hearing loss).
What is the treatment for familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
General measures
Adequate rest and keeping warm.
Moving to more temperate climates to reduce the frequency of attacks.
Interleukin 1 (IL-1) blocking therapy is now the recommended standard of care for FCAS. These biological treatments block the effect of IL-1β on the IL-1 receptor, inhibiting downstream signalling which reduces systemic inflammation and improves symptom control. Dosing requirements may vary depending on severity of disease.
Currently available IL-1 blockers (given by subcutaneous injection) include:
Canakinumab (human monoclonalantibody binding to IL-1β)
FDA-approved for adult and paediatric patients over 4 years of age (2009)
Paediatric dosing: 2–8 mg/kg 8 weekly
Adult dosing: 150–600 mg 8 weekly.
Rilonacept (recombinant fusion protein binding to IL-1a and IL-1 )
FDA-approved for adults and children 12 years and older (2008)
Approved in the EU for all forms of CAPS (2013), and in Australia for patients with CAPS aged ≥8 months with a body weight of ≥10 kg (2014)
Dosing: 1–2 mg/kg daily (up to 8 mg/kg daily for more severe forms of CAPS).
What is the outcome for familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome?
FCAS is a lifelong condition with good long-term prognosis. Patients can be monitored for the rare development of amyloidosis and renal failure by monitoring for proteinuria and microalbuminuria. While the episodic attacks of FCAS can affect quality of life, treatment with IL-1 blockers has greatly improved outcomes for patients with cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS).
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