| Literature DB >> 26968522 |
María Martha Katsicas1, Ricardo Russo2.
Abstract
The juvenile spondyloarthropathies (JSpA) are a group of related rheumatic diseases characterized by involvement of peripheral large joints, axial joints, and entheses (enthesitis) that begin in the early years of life (prior to 16(th) birthday).The nomenclature and concept of spondyloarthropathies has changed during the last few decades. Although there is not any specific classification of JSpA, diseases under the spondyloarthropathy nomenclature umbrella in the younger patients include: the seronegative enthesitis and arthropathy (SEA) syndrome, juvenile ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis, and inflammatory bowel disease-associated arthritis. Moreover, the ILAR criteria for Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis includes two categories closely related to spondyloarthritis: Enthesitis-related arthritis and psoriatic arthritis.We review the pathophysiology and the use of biological agents in JSpA. JSpA are idiopathic inflammatory diseases driven by an altered balance in the proinflammatory cytokines. There is ample evidence on the role of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin-17 in the physiopathology of these entities. Several non-biologic and biologic agents have been used with conflicting results in the treatment of these complex diseases. The efficacy and safety of anti-TNF agents, such as etanercept, infliximab and adalimumab, have been analysed in controlled and uncontrolled trials, usually showing satisfactory outcomes. Other biologic agents, such as abatacept, tocilizumab and rituximab, have been insufficiently studied and their role in the therapy of SpA is uncertain. Interleukin-17-blocking agents are promising alternatives for the treatment of JSpA patients in the near future. Recommendations for the treatment of patients with JSpA have recently been proposed and are discussed in the present review.Entities:
Keywords: Biologic agents; Juvenile; Spondyloarthropaties
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26968522 PMCID: PMC4788890 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0076-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Fig. 1Historical Juvenile Spondyloarthropathy Concept. References: JAS: Juvenile Ankylosing spondylitis; PsA: Psoriatic arthritis; ReA: Recative arthritis; IBD:inflammatory bowel disease. SEAS:Seronegative enthesitis and arthritis syndrome; ERA (ILAR Criteria) Enthesitis_related arthritis: arthritis and enthesitis or arthritis or enthesitis with at least two of the following: sacroiliac joint tenderness and/or inflammatory spinal pain; presence of HLA-B27, family history in at least one first-degree relative with medically confirmed HLA-B27 associated disease, anterior uveitis that is usually associated with pain, redness, or photophobia, onset of arthritis in a boy after 6 years of age. Exclusions: psoriasis confirmed by a dermatologist in at least one first- degree relative, presence of systemic arthritis
Fig. 2Interactions between genes products and cytokines. References: ERAP1: endoplasmic reticulum aminopeptidasa. UPR : unfolded protein. The misfolding HLA-B27 mechanism in the endoplasmic reticulum, up regulate the UPR. Higher levels of UPR generates an inappropriate genes activation that perpetuate the inflammatory state
Anti-TNFα in JSpA
| Source | Drug | JSpA patients ( | Study duration | Outcomea | Study design |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henrickson [ | ETNERCEPT | 8 | 24 months | improvementb | Open-label |
| Tse [ | ETANERCEPT | 2 | |||
| INFLIXIMAB | 8 | 12 months | improvement | Open-label | |
| Sulpice [ | 20 (23 treatments) | ||||
| ETANERCEPT | 19 | 12 months | improvement | Retrospective | |
| INFLIXIMAB | 3 | ||||
| ADALIMUMAB | 1 | ||||
| Otten [ | 22 (24 treatments) | ||||
| ETANERCEPT | 20 | ||||
| INFLIXIMAB | 2 | 24 months | improvement | Multicenter | |
| ADALIMUMAB | 2 | ||||
| Horneff [ | ADALIMUMAB | 17 | 6 months | improvement | Double-Blind |
| Horneff [ | ETANERCEPT | 122 | 3 months | improvement | Open-label |
| Uncontrolled | |||||
| Burgos Vargas [ | ADALIMUMAB | 46 | 12 months | improvement | Double-Blind |
| Hugle B [ | INFLIXIMAB | 10 | 84 months | Open-label | |
| ETANERCEPT | 6 | improvement | Observational | ||
| Horneff G [ | ETANERCEPT | 41 | 12 months | improvement | Double-Blind |
References:
aOutcome measures observed were different: morning stiffness, active joints count, tender enthesal count, ESR, ACRped 30/50/70/90, inactive disease, ASAS 20/40, CHAQ, BASFI
bImprovement was defined according to each author's criteria as decrease in morning stiffness, active joints, tender enthesal count and ESR, improvement in functional capacity (CHAQ and/or BASFI). Also tools used in improvement assessment were ACR ped, BASDAI, JADAS 10, ASAS. inactive disease and remission