Literature DB >> 28056958

About the complexity of adult onset Still's disease… and advances still required for its management.

Philippe Guilpain1,2,3, Alain Le Quellec4,5.   

Abstract

Adult onset Still's disease (AOSD) is a rare inflammatory disorder that remains poorly understood. Its pathophysiology is yet to be completely elucidated, but is known to consist mainly on a cytokine cascade, responsible for the systemic manifestations. AOSD diagnosis is usually difficult and delayed, with physicians having to rule out several other conditions, including cancer or infectious diseases. Prognosis is heterogeneous and difficult to establish, ranging from benign outcome to chronic destructive polyarthritis and/or life-threatening events. In addition, treatment remains to be codified, especially considering the development of new drugs. In this commentary, we attempt to elucidate the complexity of AOSD and to highlight the need of working on prognostic tools for this disorder. We also discuss the numerous advances that would be useful for patients in the daily management of this disease.Please see related article: http://bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.com/articles/ 10.1186/s12916-016-0738-8 .

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adult onset Still’s disease; Cytokine; Diagnosis; Inflammasome; Macrophage activation syndrome; Prognosis; Score; Therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28056958      PMCID: PMC5216568          DOI: 10.1186/s12916-016-0769-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med        ISSN: 1741-7015            Impact factor:   8.775


Background

More than 100 years after its first clinical description, adult onset Still’s disease (AOSD) remains challenging to diagnose and treat, and an understanding of its pathophysiology is far from being achieved [1]. Even if the road ahead remains long and difficult, the study conducted by Ruscitti et al. [2] on the prognostic tools of AOSD represents a new step towards the better management of the disease. Their study, one of the largest published to date, provides confirmation of the impact of Pouchot’s ‘systemic score’ on AOSD prognosis. Indeed, these results are of significant importance considering that patient management is limited by disease complexity at the diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic levels. AOSD is a rare inflammatory disorder, the diagnosis of which is usually complex and delayed. Indeed, clinical presentation is heterogeneous and the main clinical features (spiking fever, joint involvement, skin rash and blood neutrophilia), as well as other minor ones (pharyngitis, lymph node or spleen enlargement, seritis, myalgia, hepatitis and abdominal pain), are unspecific [1]. In addition, histological confirmation and relevant biomarkers are lacking in this entity (notably, determination of glycosylated ferritin level is deceiving). Therefore, diagnosis is based on criteria (Yamaguchi’s or Fautrel’s) developed for classification rather than daily practice [3, 4]. In fact, AOSD has a diagnosis of exclusion and physicians have to rule out several other striking conditions (autoimmune, infectious or malignant diseases) through a complex diagnosis procedure. Conversely, in some cases, malignancies or infections have also been reported as triggering factors for AOSD, making the understanding of clinical presentation even more complex [1]. Disease complexity also lies in the pathophysiological mechanisms leading to a cytokine cascade (typically Th1) through an abnormal response of innate immune cells (especially macrophages) following the activation of Toll-like receptors [1]. Another complexity level is the highly variable prognosis, which ranges from a limited and benign outcome to chronic destructive polyarthritis and/or life-threatening involvement such as visceral complications (heart, kidney, lung or central nervous system), thrombotic microangiopathy or macrophage activation syndrome (MAS; also called reactive hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis) [1, 5–8]. Although exceptional, fatal events have been linked to AOSD-related complications and infections. Additionally, current treatments (i.e. NSAIDs, glucocorticoids and immunosuppressive drugs and biotherapies, in some cases) may also be deleterious, particularly in the long-term. Of note, the classification [5, 9, 10] distinguishing monocyclic, polycyclic and chronic AOSD is not useful for patient management, since it does not integrate severity and a functional and/or vital related prognosis. More precisely, it remains difficult to predict outcome at diagnosis and, consequently, drawing management guidelines presents a major challenge. Clearly, joint involvement at diagnosis may affect functional prognosis through destructions resembling those of rheumatoid arthritis [11], while systemic manifestations can impair vital prognosis [6] (‘dichotomous view’ of AOSD [1]). A fever higher than 39.5 °C mainly occurs in systemic AOSD, whereas a leukocyte count higher than 30,000/mm3 and systemic inflammation markers are correlated with relapses [12]. Increased serum ferritin levels are associated with disease activity and chronic or recurrent forms of AOSD [7, 12–14]. In 1991, from a study on 62 patients, Pouchot et al. [5] proposed a ‘systemic score’ reaching up to 12 points, and assigning one point to each of the following manifestations: fever, skin rash, pleuritis, pneumonia, pericarditis, liver involvement, spleen involvement, lymphadenopathy, leucocytosis > 15,000/mm3, sore throat, myalgia, and abdominal pain. This score is easy to calculate, but remains to be validated in further studies. In their article recently published in BMC Medicine, Ruscitti et al. [2] report that Pouchot’s ‘systemic score’ [5] successfully predicts a poor outcome in AOSD. More precisely, a ‘systemic score’ higher than 6 (discriminating cut-off ≥ 7) and the presence of any complication (MAS, kidney failure or myocarditis) at diagnosis are associated with mortality. Ruscitti et al. [2] observed MAS in 13 out of 100 patients recruited in the last 16 years, which is consistent with values in previous studies (10–15%) [8, 15]. However, death occurred in 10 patients, which is extremely high and unexepected. In AOSD, MAS is classically associated with persistent and/or refractory diseases and has been known to impair vital prognosis, but not at this level. For example, a recent Korean study identified 21 MAS among 109 AOSD patients and only two patients died [15], which is consistent with other published studies [8, 16]. In another recent study in Japan, the MAS-related mortality rate was approximately 20% among AOSD patients [17]. Therefore, the high mortality rate reported by Ruscitti et al. [2] undoubtedly has an important weight on the results, especially for the prognostic score, but also simply reflects on the potential severity of AOSD. Finally, since MAS is in reality a life-threatening event, this should not modify our perception of these findings.

Conclusions

We hope that physicians will now be interested in Pouchot’s score and that further studies will simply confirm it as a prognostic tool. The discriminating cut-off predictive of death should also be evaluated and even precised. From this point of view, the study by Ruscitti et al. [2] represents an interesting step in the understanding of AOSD clinical presentation. Interestingly, these findings are in line with the ‘dichotomous view’ of AOSD [1] and could be helpful for the therapeutic decision between glucocorticoids alone or combined with immunosuppressive drugs/biologics as first-line treatment. The final issue raised by this study concerns the methodology, whose improvement is crucial for clinical research on AOSD in the near future. In this rare inflammatory disorder, international or national (as that by Ruscitti et al. [2]) collaborative studies would provide the critical mass for pertinent statistical analyses and validation through evidence-based medicine. As often observed, prognostic and therapeutic advances will probably arise from a better understanding of clinical phenotypes and pathophysiological mechanisms, and from a ‘dismemberment’ of AOSD into several entities, analogous to what ensued following the discovery of biomarkers, such as anti-neutrophil cytoplasm antibodies, on the spectrum of ‘polyarteritis nodosa’ and other vasculitides. The concept of AOSD as a disorder clinically meeting Yamaguchi’s criteria probably covers several entities with distinct pathophysiological processes but certain common inflammatory actors. Will the advances on inflammasome and cytokines help during the following years? Since AOSD is at the frontier of autoimmune and autoinflammatory disorders, the answer is ‘yes, probably’. In the end, what do the two forms of AOSD, namely systemic monophasic AOSD with high inflammation state at onset and complete recovery after several months versus chronic AOSD with systemic onset and chronic destructive sero-negative polyarthritis, have in common? The answer remains: ‘only our perplexity and ignorance…’
  17 in total

1.  Proposal for a new set of classification criteria for adult-onset still disease.

Authors:  Bruno Fautrel; Emmanuel Zing; Jean-Louis Golmard; Giselle Le Moel; Anne Bissery; Christophe Rioux; Sylvie Rozenberg; Jean-Charles Piette; Pierre Bourgeois
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 1.889

2.  Clinical features and prognosis in adult-onset Still's disease: a study of 104 cases.

Authors:  Xiao-Dan Kong; Dong Xu; Wen Zhang; Yan Zhao; Xiaofeng Zeng; Fengchun Zhang
Journal:  Clin Rheumatol       Date:  2010-06-14       Impact factor: 2.980

3.  Preliminary criteria for classification of adult Still's disease.

Authors:  M Yamaguchi; A Ohta; T Tsunematsu; R Kasukawa; Y Mizushima; H Kashiwagi; S Kashiwazaki; K Tanimoto; Y Matsumoto; T Ota
Journal:  J Rheumatol       Date:  1992-03       Impact factor: 4.666

Review 4.  Reactive haemophagocytic syndrome in adult-onset Still's disease: a report of six patients and a review of the literature.

Authors:  J-B Arlet; Thi Huong D Le; A Marinho; Z Amoura; B Wechsler; T Papo; J-C Piette
Journal:  Ann Rheum Dis       Date:  2006-03-15       Impact factor: 19.103

5.  Adult-onset Still's disease; clinical and laboratory features, treatment and progress of 45 cases.

Authors:  J M Wouters; L B van de Putte
Journal:  Q J Med       Date:  1986-11

Review 6.  Adult onset Still's disease (AOSD) in the era of biologic therapies: dichotomous view for cytokine and clinical expressions.

Authors:  Alexandre Thibault Jacques Maria; Alain Le Quellec; Christian Jorgensen; Isabelle Touitou; Sophie Rivière; Philippe Guilpain
Journal:  Autoimmun Rev       Date:  2014-08-27       Impact factor: 9.754

7.  Adult Still's disease: manifestations, disease course, and outcome in 62 patients.

Authors:  J Pouchot; J S Sampalis; F Beaudet; S Carette; F Décary; M Salusinsky-Sternbach; R O Hill; A Gutkowski; M Harth; D Myhal
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  1991-03       Impact factor: 1.889

8.  A controlled study of the long-term prognosis of adult Still's disease.

Authors:  J S Sampalis; J M Esdaile; T A Medsger; A J Partridge; C Yeadon; J L Senécal; D Myhal; M Harth; A Gutkowski; S Carette
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 4.965

9.  Adult-onset Still's disease. Clinical course and outcome.

Authors:  J J Cush; T A Medsger; W C Christy; D C Herbert; L A Cooperstein
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  1987-02

10.  Reactive hemophagocytic syndrome in adult-onset Still disease: clinical features, predictive factors, and prognosis in 21 patients.

Authors:  Chang-Bum Bae; Ju-Yang Jung; Hyoun-Ah Kim; Chang-Hee Suh
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2015-01       Impact factor: 1.889

View more
  4 in total

1.  Adult Onset Still's Disease and Radiotherapy treatment for breast cancer: Case report about management of this rare association and literature review.

Authors:  Fabio Marazzi; Valeria Masiello; Gianluca Franceschini; Silvia Bosello; Francesca Moschella; Daniela Smaniotto; Stefano Luzi; Antonino Mulé; Maria Antonietta Gambacorta; Elisa Gremese; Riccardo Masetti; Vincenzo Valentini
Journal:  Rep Pract Oncol Radiother       Date:  2020-05-22

2.  Upregulation of circulating microRNA-134 in adult-onset Still's disease and its use as potential biomarker.

Authors:  Tsai-Ling Liao; Yi-Ming Chen; Chia-Wei Hsieh; Hsin-Hua Chen; Hsiu-Chin Lee; Wei-Ting Hung; Kuo-Tung Tang; Der-Yuan Chen
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-06-23       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Effects of HLA-DRB1 alleles on susceptibility and clinical manifestations in Japanese patients with adult onset Still's disease.

Authors:  Tomoyuki Asano; Hiroshi Furukawa; Shuzo Sato; Makiko Yashiro; Hiroko Kobayashi; Hiroshi Watanabe; Eiji Suzuki; Tomoyuki Ito; Yoshifumi Ubara; Daisuke Kobayashi; Nozomi Iwanaga; Yasumori Izumi; Keita Fujikawa; Satoshi Yamasaki; Tadashi Nakamura; Tomohiro Koga; Toshimasa Shimizu; Masataka Umeda; Fumiaki Nonaka; Michio Yasunami; Yukitaka Ueki; Katsumi Eguchi; Naoyuki Tsuchiya; Shigeto Tohma; Koh-Ichiro Yoshiura; Hiromasa Ohira; Atsushi Kawakami; Kiyoshi Migita
Journal:  Arthritis Res Ther       Date:  2017-09-12       Impact factor: 5.156

4.  A Diagnosis of Adult-Onset Still's Disease after Multiple Urgent Care Visits.

Authors:  Kami M Hu; Adam C Richardson; Kelly M Blosser; Semhar Z Tewelde
Journal:  Case Rep Med       Date:  2019-09-10
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.