| Literature DB >> 26356098 |
Christine A M Smith1, Karine Toupin-April2, Jeffrey W Jutai3, Ciarán M Duffy4, Prinon Rahman5, Sabrina Cavallo6, Lucie Brosseau7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The objectives of this review are to: 1) appraise the methodological quality of clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) providing pharmacological and/or non-pharmacological intervention recommendations, and 2) summarize the recommendations provided by the included CPGs and compare them where possible.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26356098 PMCID: PMC4565560 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0137180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Quality scores of included CPGs using AGREE II.
| AGREE II Domains | ACR [ | GKJR [ | RACGP [ |
| Range of quality scores (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domain 1. Scope and purpose (%) | 78% | 57% | 83% | 72.67 (13.80) | 26 |
| Domain 2. Stakeholder involvement (%) | 61% | 61% | 78% | 66.67 (9.81) | 17 |
| Domain 3. Rigor of development (%) | 67% | 56% | 71% | 64.67 (7.77) | 15 |
| Domain 4. Clarity of presentation (%) | 91% | 76% | 94% | 87.00 (9.64) | 18 |
| Domain 5. Applicability (%) | 8% | 15% | 19% | 14.00 (5.57) | 11 |
| Domain 6. Editorial independence (%) | 50% | 36% | 44% | 43.33 (7.02) | 14 |
| Overall quality rating of the CPG | 4.33 (0.58) | 3.67 (0.58) | 5.67 (0.58) |
ACR: American College of Rheumatology; GKJR: German Society for Pediatric Rheumatology; RACGP: Royal Australian College of General Practitioners; : mean; SD: standard deviation.
aRating established using the AGREE II 7-point scale.
Scope and context of the CPGs.
| ACR [ | GKJR [ | RACGP [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population of patients with JIA | History of arthritis in ≤ 4 active joints, history of arthritis in ≥ 5 active joints, systemic JIA (sJIA) with active systemic features (no active arthritis), sJIA with active arthritis (no systemic features), and sJIA with features concerning for macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) | Specific recommendations occasionally provided for oligoarthritis, polyarthritis, and sJIA onset types; otherwise the recommendations do not specify all onset types according to the International League of Associations for Rheumatology | Oligoarticular, polyarticular (RF negative), polyarticular (RF positive), systemic, enthesitis related, psoriatic and undifferentiated JIA onset types |
| Target audience | Pediatric rheumatologists | Physicians, affiliated professionals in healthcare, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and others caring for patients with JIA | General practitioners plus physical therapists, occupational therapists, sports medicine workers, podiatrists, dieticians, psychologists, pharmacists, nurses, community health workers |
| Range of pharmacological interventions | NSAIDs, glucocorticoids (injection and systemic), nonbiologic DMARDs, biologic DMARDs (sJIA) | NSAIDs, glucocorticoids (injection and systemic), prednisone/prednisolone, DMARDs, biologics | NSAIDs, topical NSAIDs, simple analgesics, weak opioids, complementary and alternative medicines |
| Range of non-pharmacological interventions | N/A | Electrotherapy, ultrasound, exercise, massage, lymph drainage, orthotics management (corrective appliances/splints), physiotherapy, occupational therapy, psychological support, socio-pedagogical care, synovectomy, thermotherapy | Complementary and alternative physical therapies, exercise (land-based and aquatic), nutritional therapy, orthotics management (corrective appliances/splints), thermotherapy |
| Notes | The 2013 update focused solely on sJIA; no discussion of contraindications, intolerance, tapering or discontinuing medications in the event of inactive disease | Excluded information on medication resistance or obscure and difficult arthritis cases | Main focus is on early diagnosis, initiation of intervention, and referral to pediatric rheumatologists; recommendations are for short term care and then planning and management for long-term care; multidisciplinary and developed for the Australian healthcare context |
sJIA = systemic JIA; MAS = macrophage activation syndrome; NSAIDs = non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; DMARDs = disease modifying antirheumatic drug
Summary of recommendations for pharmacological interventions in JIA based on included CPGs.
N.B. This is meant as a summary of the recommendations only. Please refer to the official CPGs before providing treatment to patients.
| ACR 2011 & 2013 [ | GKJR 2012 [ | RACGP 2009 [ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recommend: Yes/No/Unsure (Grade) | Details | Recommend: Yes/No/Unsure (Grade) | Details | Recommend: Yes/No/Unsure (Grade) | Details | |
|
| ||||||
| Celecoxib |
| not been approved in children; use if diclofenac, naproxen, ibuprofen and indomethacin are contraindicated | 2–4 mg/kg b.i.d. | |||
| Diclofenac |
| ≥14 years old | 1 mg/kg b.i.d. | |||
| Ibuprofen |
| ≥6 months; treat pain, fever | 10 mg/kg 3–4 times daily | |||
| Indomethacin |
| ≥2 years old | 0.5–1.0 2–3 times daily | |||
| Meloxicam |
| ≥15 years old; recommendation grade not given | 0.15–0.30 mg/kg o.d. | |||
| Naproxen |
| ≥1 year old | 5–7.5 mg/kg b.i.d. | |||
| Piroxicam | 0.2–0.4 mg/kg o.d. | |||||
| NSAID monotherapy |
|
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| Initial drug of choice to reduce pain and inflammation; see | ||
| Topical NSAIDs |
| No studies available | ||||
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| Glucocorticoid (intra-articular injection) |
|
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| Triamcinolone hexacetonide; possible as part of first line Tx; triamcinolone hexacetonide preferred over triamcinolone acetonide due to efficacy | ||
| Glucocorticoid (systemic) |
|
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| For highly AD; for pts with sJIA, complications (uveitis, pericardial effusion), RF-positive JIA; use while waiting for therapeutic effect of DMARD Tx to be complete; not recommended for long-term use; not recommended to continuously give 0.2 mg/kg of a prednisolone equivalent to pts | ||
| Prednisolone/prednisone |
| for severe sJIA; can be used as oral medium- or high-dose Tx; can also be used as IV pulse Tx; recommendation grade not given | ||||
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| ||||||
| Azathioprine | (Level II) | not been approved in children; 1.5–3 mg/kg per day orally in 1–2 doses | ||||
| Leflunomide |
|
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| Use only if MTX/etanercept insufficient at treating disease; not been approved in children | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| Methotrexate |
|
|
| If NSAIDs and/or GC injections ineffective; use when continuously need systemic GCs OR if high DA; 10–15 mg/m2 oral/SC; ≥ 2 years old; for poly-JIA, psoriatic JIA, uveitis, collagenosis | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| Sulfasalazine |
|
|
| Use if MTX/etanercept insufficient | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| Nonbiologic DMARD combinations |
|
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| Abatacept |
|
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| ≥ 6 years old; for pts with poly-JIA (non-systemic) when unresponsive MTX and TNFα inhibitors | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| Anakinra |
|
|
| Not been approved in children; ≥ 2 years old; for refractory sJIA | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| Canakinumab |
|
| Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist | ||
| Calcineurin inhibitor |
|
| Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist | ||
| Etanercept |
| ≥ 4 years old; for polyarticular JIA | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist | ||
| Rilanocept |
|
| Not been approved in children with JIA 12 years old?? | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist | |
| Rituximab |
|
| Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist | ||
| Tocilizumab |
|
|
| ≥ 2 years old; for refractory sJIA | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
| TNF alpha inhibitors |
|
|
| if not enough response to NSAIDs and GC injections OR if no response to MTX; for poly-JIA | Not assessed | GPs to refer patient to pediatric rheumatology specialist |
|
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| Hydroxychloroquine monotherapy** |
|
| Not assessed | Clinical trials revealed limited efficacy | ||
| Autologus stem cell transplantation (SCT) | Level III | Only as a last resort because of serious adverse events | ||||
| Simple analgesics |
| Use paracetamol; varies by body mass; seek medical advice for use >48 hours; use as short-term Tx | ||||
| Weak opioids |
| Codeine is weak opioid of choice; prescribe with paracetamol for moderate pain of articulations; varies by body mass; seek medical advice for use >48 hours | ||||
| Intravenous immune-globulin (IVIG) |
|
| ||||
| Comple- mentary and alternative medicines (CAM) |
| Ask pt/parents about use of CAM and possibly inform that no RCTs or systematic reviews available in children; low risk intervention, but interactions with medications a concern | ||||
DMARDs = disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; NSAIDs = non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; MTX = methotrexate; GC = glucocorticoid
Hx = history; DA = disease activity; FPP = features of poor prognosis (see ACR 2011 & 2013 for detailed description); AJC = active joint count; MD global = physician global assessment (10-point numeric rating scale); SC = subcutaneous; b.i.d. = twice daily; o.d. = once daily; pt = patient
oligo-JIA = oligoarticular JIA; poly-JIA = polyarticular JIA; sJIA = systemic JIA
Summary of recommendations for non-pharmacological interventions in JIA based on included CPGs.
| GKJR [ | RACGP [ | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recommend: Yes/No/Unsure (Grade) | Details | Recommend: Yes/No/Unsure (Grade) | Details | |
| Complementary/alternative physical therapies |
| No research available using children with JIA | ||
| Electrotherapy and ultrasound |
| For pts with tendosynovitis | ||
| Exercise |
| Depends on amount of inflammation, number of joints affected and global assessment of disease activity; low-impact sports preferred so easier on joints |
|
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| Massage and lymph drainage |
| |||
| Nutritional therapy |
| Monitor calcium intake and provide advice about increasing intake; consider giving calcium and vitamin D supplements, especially pts on corticosteroids due to higher risk of osteoporosis and osteopenia | ||
| Orthotics management (corrective appliances/splints) |
| For axial misalignment, prevention false weight bearing, joint stabilization; case-by-case decision by physician |
|
|
| Physiotherapy/occupational therapy |
| In combination with pharmacological therapy; provide pts with exercise sessions for joint mobility | ||
| Psychological support |
| In combination with standard pediatric rheumatology care; identify and treat mental and behavioural problems related to physical aspects of disease | ||
| Socio-pedagogical care |
| Includes help with school, work and daily life integration; educate parents and pts | ||
| Synovectomy |
| Open or arthroscopic; use on case-by-case basis only after other therapies are unsuccessful | ||
| Thermotherapy |
| Use cold appliances for acute joint inflammation |
| Use heat or cold packs, warm baths and/or ice massage; for relief of JIA symptoms |
N.B. This is meant as a summary of the recommendations only. Please refer to the official clinical practice guidelines for more details on the types of interventions in broader categories (e.g. complementary and alternative physical therapies)
pt = patient