| Literature DB >> 27648582 |
Mario Abinun, Jonathan P Lane, Mark Wood, Mark Friswell, Terence J Flood, Helen E Foster.
Abstract
Severe infections are emerging as major risk factors for death among children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). In particular, children with refractory JIA treated with long-term, multiple, and often combined immunosuppressive and antiinflammatory agents, including the new biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), are at increased risk for severe infections and death. We investigated 4 persons with JIA who died during 1994-2013, three of overwhelming central venous catheter-related bacterial sepsis caused by coagulase-negative Staphylococus or α-hemolytic Streptococcus infection and 1 of disseminated adenovirus and Epstein-Barr virus infection). All 4 had active JIA refractory to long-term therapy with multiple and combined conventional and biological DMARDs. Two died while receiving high-dose systemic corticosteroids, methotrexate, and after recent exposure to anti-tumor necrosis factor-α biological DMARDs, and 2 during hematopoietic stem cell transplantation procedure. Reporting all cases of severe infections and especially deaths in these children is of paramount importance for accurate surveillance.Entities:
Keywords: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis; TNF-α blocking agents; United Kingdom; anti–TNF-α; bacteria; biological disease-modifying drugs; central venous catheter bacteria; children; combined immunosuppressive and antiinflammatory therapy; immunosuppression; sepsis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27648582 PMCID: PMC5038400 DOI: 10.3201/eid2210.151245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Disease characteristics and treatment at time of death for 2 children with JIA, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom*
| Characteristic | Patient 1 | Patient 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Year of disease onset/year of death | 1996/2004 | 2000/2004 |
| Age at So-JIA diagnosis/at death, y | 5/13 | 2/6 |
| JIA symptom or sign, ever | ||
| Fever | Yes | Yes |
| Rash | Yes | Yes |
| Arthritis | Yes | Yes |
| Lymphadenopathy | No | No |
| Hepato/splenomegaly | Yes | Yes |
| Serositis | No | No |
| Macrophage activation syndrome | No | Yes |
| Disease remission, ever | No | No |
| JADAS-10† | 20–35 | 12–32 |
| Treatment | ||
| Corticosteroids‡ | Yes§ | Yes§ |
| Methotrexate¶ | Yes§ | Yes§ |
| Cyclosporin A | No | Yes# |
| Intravenous immunoglobulins** | No | Yes†† |
| Etanercept | Yes‡‡ | No |
| Infliximab | Yes§,§§ | Yes§¶¶ |
| Side effects of treatment | ||
| Cushingoid | Yes | Yes |
| Cataracts | Yes | No |
| Osteoporosis | Yes | Yes |
| Osteoarticular tuberculosis | Yes | No |
| Stunted growth | Yes | Yes |
*JADAS, Juvenile Arthritis Disease Activity Score; JIA, juvenile idiopathic arthritis; So-JIA, systemic JIA. †Linear sum of the scores of the 4 JADAS components (0–40): physician global assessment of disease activity (measured on a 10-cm visual analog scale; 0 = no activity and 10 = maximum activity); parent/patient global assessment of well-being (measured on a 10-cm visual analog scale; 0 = very well and 10 = very poor); count of joints with active disease (0–10); erythrocyte sedimentation rate (actual value/10; range 0–10) (). ‡Methylprednisolone pulses (intravenous 30 mg/kg/day; maximum. 1 g) given as a 3-day course or a single dose (weekly or otherwise), when indicated based on clinical decision (for treating a disease flare). Prednisolone maintenance dose (orally 0.5–1 mg/kg/d) with adjusting and aiming for alternate day regimen whenever possible depending on the clinical course or disease activity. §Treatment at time of death. ¶Subcutaneously 15 mg/m2/wk. #March–December 2002. **2 g/kg/mo. ††December 2003–January 2004. ‡‡0.4 mg/kg/wk during March–May 2000 () and again during May 2003–January 2004. §§5 mg/kg single dose, February 2004. ¶¶6 mg/kg/mo during December 2002–December 2003.
Laboratory parameters of inflammatory activity for 2 children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom, 2004*
| Patient no., date | CRP, mg/dL | Ne, × 109 cells/L | PLT, × 109/L | ESR, mm/h | Ferr, μg/L | Fib, g/L | TG, mmol/L | Alb, g/L | ALT, U/L | Na, mmol/L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | ||||||||||
| Feb 17 | 100 | 20.2 | 322 | 35 | 485 | 5.4 | 0.7 | 34 | 24 | 142 |
| Feb 28 | 107 | 28.5 | 266 | – | – | – | – | 31 | 35 | 136 |
| Feb 29 | 157 | 15.8 | 140 | – | – | – | – | 22 | 48 | 134 |
| Mar 1 | 63 | 7.1 | 79 | – | – | – | – | 23 | 120 | 140 |
| Patient 2 | ||||||||||
| May 27 | 122 | 17.2 | 475 | 45 | 339 | 6.3 | 1.9 | 44 | 10 | 135 |
| Jun 1 | 260 | 34.9 | 603 | – | 2815 | 8.0 | – | 38 | 23 | 137 |
| Jun 6 | 365 | 37.5 | 710 | 105 | 7692 | 8.1 | – | 37 | 50 | 134 |
| Jun 10 | 127 | 70.5 | 244 | – | – | 2.9 | – | 13 | 125 | 134 |
*Laboratory parameters for diagnosing macrophage activation syndrome: Ferr >684 μg/L and any 2 of the following signs: PLT count <181 × 109/L, ALT >48 U/L, TG >156 mg/dL, fibrinogen <360 mg/dL (). See section in text on MAS versus Multiorgan Failure. Alb, serum albumin level (reference 38–53 g/L); ALT, serum alanine transaminase level (reference 0–40 U/L); CRP, C-reactive protein (reference 0–5 mg/dL); ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (Westergren; reference 1–10 mm/h); Ferr, serum ferritin level (reference 20–60 μg/L); Fib, serum fibrinogen level (reference 1.5–4.0 g/L); Na, serum sodium level (reference 135–145 mmol/L); Ne, absolute neutrophil count; PLT, absolute platelet count; TG, serum triglyceride level (reference 0.5–1.8).