| Literature DB >> 27301536 |
J Fráňová1,2, Š Fingerhutová1, K Kobrová1, R Srp1, D Němcová1, J Hoza1, M Uher3, M Saifridová1, L Linková1, P Doležalová4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a lack of published evidence on the importance of methotrexate (MTX) dose and route of administration on both its efficacy and adverse events in children with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA). We aimed to document our clinical practice based on the treat-to-target approach in order to support the concept that better therapeutic effect achieved with an optimal dose of parenteral MTX is associated with clinically acceptable adverse effects comparable to those reported for oral treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Efficacy; Intolerance; Juvenile idiopathic arthritis; Methotrexate; Quality of life; Toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27301536 PMCID: PMC4908704 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0099-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Characteristics of 55 patients at study entry
| Female n(%) | 38 (69.1) |
| New onset n(%) | 48 (87.3) |
| Age at onset (years) median (IQR) | 4.8 (2.2; 10.0) |
| Age at MTX start (years) median (IQR) | 5.3 (2.8; 10.6) |
| Interval from onset to MTX start (months) median (IQR) | 3.8 (2.5; 6.4) |
| JIA subtype n | |
| – Oligoarthritis: persistent/extended | 18/3 (32.7 %/5.5 %) |
| – Polyarthritis (RF positive n = 1) | 25 (45.5 %) |
| – Systemic with polyarthritis | 5 (9.1 %) |
| – Enthesitis-related | 3 (5.5 %) |
| – Psoriatic | 1(1.8 %) |
| Parent/patient global assessment of well-being mm, median (IQR) | 27 (15; 40) |
| CHAQ 0–3 median (IQR) | 0.25 (0.13; 0.69) |
| ESR mm/h median (IQR) | 23 (15; 35) |
| MTX dose mg/m2 /week median (IQR) | 14.2 (12.1;15.2) |
| – s.c. (n = 45) | 14.4 (13.3; 15.9) |
| – p.o. (n = 10) | 11.7 (8.3; 12.5) |
| Concomitant therapy n(%) | |
| – IATHa | 21 (38.2) |
| – Sulphasalazine | 1 (1.8) |
| – Systemic corticosteroids | 9 (16.4) |
| – Folic acid 5–10 mg/weekb | 55 (100) |
aWithin 1 month prior to or after MTX start
bOnce weekly dose 24–48 hours post-MTX administration
MTX, Methotrexate
IATH, Intraarticular triamcinolone hexacetonide
CHAQ, Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire
Global assessments in mm on the 100 mm visual analogue scale
Changes in the treatment during the follow-up
| N (%) | Time from MTX onset (months)a | JADAS71 at the time of changea | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ↑MTX dose | 18 (32.7) | 3.0 (3.0; 6.0) | 7.0 (4.5; 11.5) |
| ↓MTX dose | 20 (36.4) | 7.5 (6.0; 9.0) | 0.5 (0.0; 2.5) |
| Change in route of administration | 13 (23.6) | 6.0 (4.0; 12.0) | 2.0 (0.4; 9.9) |
| Withdrawal | 5 (9.1) | 9.0 (8.0; 9.0) | 3.0 (0.0; 6.5) |
| Addition of biologic | 14 (25.5) | 3.8 (4.0; 8.8) | 15.8 (6.5; 13.0) |
avalues are medians (interquartile range)
Evolution of the treatment response expressed by different standardised measures
| F/U (months) | ACRpedi70 (%) | ACRpedi90 (%) | JADAS inactive (%) | JADAS low activity (%) | CID (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 28.6 | 12.7 | 5.5 | 21.8 | 9.1 |
| 6 | 50.9 | 42.9 | 32.7 | 47.2 | 30.9 |
| 9 | 56.4 | 50.9 | 43.6 | 54.5 | 47.2 |
| 12 | 70.9 | 63.6 | 56.4 | 61.8 | 56.4 |
F/U, Follow-up visit; CID, Clinically Inactive Disease [40]
Results for 55 patients are shown. Patients who received biologics and/or who withdrew MTX were considered non-responders from the time point of starting the biologic or stopping MTX
Fig. 1Treatment response expressed by JADAS in polyarticular-course and persistent oligoarticular JIA
Evolution of gastrointestinal toxicity, anticipatory/associative intolerance and behavioral symptoms
| Months | na | MISS O | MTX intolerance | Anticipatory and/or associative symptoms | Gastrointestinal toxicity | Behavioral symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | n (%) | ||
| 3 | 53 | 19(3.8 %) | 10 (18.5 %) | 11 (20.8 %) | 16 (30.2 %) | 31 (58.5 %) |
| 6 | 54 | 13 (24.1 %) | 14 (25.5 %) | 16 (29.6 %) | 25 (46.3 %) | 33 (66.1 %) |
| 9 | 49 | 17 (34.7 %) | 14 (28.0 %) | 13 (26.5 %) | 20 (40.8 %) | 27 (55.1 %) |
| 12 | 49 | 18 (36.7 %) | 15 (30.6 %) | 9 (18.4 %) | 16 (32.7 %) | 28 (57.1 %) |
MISS, Methotrexate Intolerance Severity Score
aMISS not available for 2 patients at Month 3. In subsequent months numbers reduced by patients who withdrew (n = 5), in 1 patient MISS at 9 and 12 months not available
Overall and per domain prevalence of MTX- related gastrointestinal and behavioral adverse events at 6 months
| All patients | MTX tolerant | MTX intolerant | Parenteral MTX | Oral MTX |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (MISS 0–5) | (MISS ≥ 6) | |||||
| Number of patients |
|
|
|
|
| |
| Cutoff score ≥ 6 | 14 (25,9 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 14 (100,0 %) | 12 (25,5 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 1 |
| Cutoff score = 0 | 13 (24,1 %) | 13 (32,5 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 12 (25,5 %) | 1 (14,3 %) | 1 |
| Anticipatory ± associative symptoms | 16 (29,6 %) | 7 (17,5 %) | 9 (64,3 %) | 14 (29,8 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 1 |
| Gastrointestinal toxicity | 25 (46,3 %) | 14 (35,0 %) | 11 (78,6 %) | 20 (42,6 %) | 5 (71,4 %) | 0,229 |
| Behavioral symptoms | 33 (61,1 %) | 19 (47,5 %) | 14 (100,0 %) | 29 (61,7 %) | 4 (57,1 %) | 1 |
| Abdominal pain | 20 (37,0 %) | 9 (22,5 %) | 11 (78,6 %) | 18 (38,3 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 1 |
| - after MTX | 15 (27,8 %) | 7 (17,5 %) | 8 (57,1 %) | 13 (27,7 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 1 |
| - anticipatory | 6 (11,1 %) | 2 (5,0 %) | 4 (28,6 %) | 6 (12,8 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 1 |
| - associative | 4 (7,4 %) | 1 (2,5 %) | 3 (21,4 %) | 4 (8,5 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 1 |
| Nausea | 25 (46,3 %) | 15 (37,5 %) | 10 (71,4 %) | 21 (44,7 %) | 4 (57,1 %) | 0,692 |
| - after MTX | 21 (38,9 %) | 12 (30,0 %) | 9 (64,3 %) | 17 (36,2 %) | 4 (57,1 %) | 0,411 |
| - anticipatory | 8 (14,8 %) | 1 (2,5 %) | 7 (50,0 %) | 8 (17,0 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 0,577 |
| - associative | 9 (16,7 %) | 4 (10,0 %) | 5 (35,7 %) | 7 (14,9 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 0,33 |
| Vomiting | 5 (9,3 %) | 2 (5,0 %) | 3 (21,4 %) | 5 (10,6 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 1 |
| - after MTX | 5 (9,3 %) | 2 (5,0 %) | 3 (21,4 %) | 5 (10,6 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 1 |
| - anticipatory | 2 (3,7 %) | 1 (2,5 %) | 1 (7,1 %) | 2 (4,3 %) | 0 (0,0 %) | 1 |
| Behavioral symptoms | 33 (61,1 %) | 19 (47,5 %) | 14 (100,0 %) | 29 (61,7 %) | 4 (57,1 %) | 1 |
| - restlessness | 25 (46,3 %) | 13 (32,5 %) | 12 (85,7 %) | 22 (46,8 %) | 3 (42,9 %) | 1 |
| - crying | 24 (44,4 %) | 13 (32,5 %) | 11 (78,6 %) | 22 (46,8 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 0,443 |
| - irritability | 21 (38,9 %) | 8 (20,0 %) | 13 (92,9 %) | 19 (40,4 %) | 2 (28,6 %) | 0,693 |
| - refusal of MTX | 14 (25,9 %) | 5 (12,5 %) | 9 (64,3 %) | 13 (27,7 %) | 1 (14,3 %) | 0,662 |
Potential predictors of MTX intolerance (MISS ≥ 6)
| MISS intolerance | ||
|---|---|---|
| OR (95 % CI)a |
| |
| Male | 0,70 (0,22; 2,22) | 0,546 |
| Age at onset (by 10 yrs) | 1,61 (0,51; 5,02) | 0,416 |
| Age at MTX start (by 10 yrs) | 1,46 (0,48; 4,47) | 0,505 |
| Interval from onset to MTX start (by 10 months) | 0,41 (0,10; 1,58) | 0,194 |
| Uveitis before MTX treatment | 0,87 (0,21; 3,67) | 0,853 |
| ANA positive | 1,49 (0,51; 4,37) | 0,465 |
| Active joints (by 10 joints) | 1,01 (0,55; 1,84) | 0,979 |
| Joints with limitation of motion (by10 joints) | 1,12 (0,63; 1,98) | 0,695 |
| Physician global assessment of disease activity (by 10 mm) | 1,22 (0,87; 1,69) | 0,245 |
| Parent/patient global assessment of well-being (by 10 mm) | 0,88 (0,68; 1,14) | 0,328 |
| FW (by 10 mm/h) | 1,26 (0,95; 1,67) | 0,111 |
| CRP (by 10 mg/l) | 1,09 (0,89; 1,34) | 0,409 |
| CHAQ | 0,30 (0,08; 1,17) | 0,083 |
| JADAS 71(á 10 points) | 1,12 (0,68; 1,82) | 0,659 |
| Parenteral form of methotrexate | 2,44 (0,56; 10,65) | 0,236 |
| Initial MTX dose (mg/m2) | 1,15 (0,94; 1,40) | 0,181 |
| Polyarticular form of JIA | 1,43 (0,36; 5,78) | 0,612 |
aOR = odds ratio, 95 % IS = 95 % confidence interval
MTX efficacy in relation to prior disease duration, dose and route of administration
| Publication | No of patients | Prior disease duration | MTX dose (route) | ACRpedi70 (%)/CID (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment duration (months) | |||||
| 6 | 12 | ||||
| Ruperto 2004 [ | 595 | 2.7 yrs (mean) | 10 ± 2.3 mg/m2 (78 % p.o.) | 38/12b | |
| 40 | 14.5 ± 1.3 mg/m2 (s.c., i.m.)a | 45/12.5b | |||
| 40 | 28.5 ± 2.5 mg/m2 (s.c., i.m.)a | 47.5/10b | |||
| Bartoli 2007 [ | 125 | 1.45 yrs (med) | 10 mg/m2 (NA) | 26.4/NA | |
| Tynjala 2011 [ | 20 | 1.5 mo (mean) | 15–30 mg/m2 (p.o.,s.c.) | 60/25 | |
| Klein 2012 [ | 259 | 1.1 yrs (med) | 0,4 mg/kg (p.o.) | 51/NA | 66/NA |
| 152 | 0.8 yrs (med) | 0.42 mg/kg (s.c.) | 53/NA | ||
| Bulatovič 2012 [ | 104 | ≥1 yrs | 9.8 mg/m2 (NA) | 38.5/NA | 50/NA |
| Wallace 2012 [ | 43 | 5.2 mo (mean) | 0.5 mg/kg (s.c.) | NA/23.3 | NA/16.3 |
| Moncrieffe2013 [ | 87 | 1.3 yrs (med) | 10–15 mg/m2 (70 % p.o.) | 56.3/NA | |
| Pastore 2015 [ | 69 | 1.0 yrs (med) | 15 mg/m2 (62 % p.o.) | 52.2/NA | |
| Fraňova 2016 | 55 | 3.5 mo (med) | 14.2 mg/m2 (18 % p.o.) | 50.9/30.9 | 70.9/56.4 |
MTX, Methotrexate
CID, Clinical Inactive Disease [40]
NA, Not available
aPatients were non-responders to the dose of 10 ± 2.3 mg/m2 after the first 6 months
bCriteria for inactive disease: Absence of active arthritis and ESR < 20 mm/h
cDose 15 mg/m2 orally, non-responders at 3 months switched to 30 mg/m2 s.c