How Should We Classify Kawasaki Disease?

Front Immunol. 2018 Dec 14:9:2974. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.02974. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

The exact classification of Kawasaki disease (KD) has been debated. Infectious disease specialists have claimed it as an infection with a classic immune responses to an as yet unidentified pathogen that localizes to the coronary arteries. Others have favored an autoreactive hypothesis that KD is triggered by an antigen that shares homology with structures in the vascular wall, and molecular mimicry resulting in an immune response directed to that tissue. Rheumatologists have classified it as a systemic vasculitis, while some immunologists have stressed the robust nature of the innate immune response that causes both systemic inflammation as well as damage to the coronary arterial wall and questioned whether KD falls within the spectrum of autoinflammatory diseases. This review will describe the evidences available up to now regarding these hypotheses.

Keywords: Kawasaki disease; coronary aneurysm; etiopathogenesis; intravenous immune globulin (IVIg); pediatric vasculitis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Autoimmune Diseases / diagnosis*
  • Autoimmune Diseases / immunology
  • Coronary Vessels / immunology
  • Coronary Vessels / pathology
  • Diagnosis, Differential
  • Hereditary Autoinflammatory Diseases / diagnosis*
  • Hereditary Autoinflammatory Diseases / immunology
  • Humans
  • Inflammation / immunology
  • Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome / classification
  • Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome / diagnosis*
  • Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome / immunology
  • Systemic Vasculitis / diagnosis*
  • Systemic Vasculitis / immunology