| Literature DB >> 28143478 |
Kristiina Aalto1, Pekka Lahdenne2, Kaija-Leena Kolho2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) on non-steroidal anti- inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may experience abdominal pain. In adults, NSAID use has been linked to an increase in fecal calprotectin (FC) levels, a surrogate marker for gut inflammation. In JIA, data on gut inflammation related to drug use is scarce.Entities:
Keywords: Abdominal pain; Biological markers; Child; Diagnosis; Gut; IBD
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28143478 PMCID: PMC5286851 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0132-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Clinical characteristics of the patients; 70 having the JIA diagnosis and 20 arthralgia
| All patients | Oligo | Poly | JSpA | All JIA | Arthralgia |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 10.2 ± 3.8 | 8.1 ± 3.5 | 11.8 ± 3.0 | 9.6 ± 3.9 | 8.7 ± 4.9 |
| Female | 25 (57%) | 19 (43%) | 0 | 44 (63%) | 13 (65%) |
| ANA-Ab + | 4 (12%) | 6 (21%) | 0 | 9 (13%) | 1 (5%) |
| Anaemia | 10 (30%) | 9 (31%) | 3 (38%) | 22 (31%) | 1 (5%) |
| HLA-B27 + | 9 (27%) | 6 (21%) | 7 (88%) | 22 (31%) | 5 (25%) |
| Active disease | 8 (24%) | 9 (31%) | 0 | 17 (24%) | 0 |
| NSAID + | 15 (45%) | 14 (48%) | 5 (63%) | 34 (49%) | 12 (60%) |
| DMARD + | 20 (61%) | 20 (69%) | 5 (63%) | 45 (64%) | 0 |
| Biologicals + | 3 (10%) | 2 (7%) | 0 | 5 (7%) | 0 |
JIA juvenile idiopathic arthritis
Oligo juvenile oligoarthritis, Poly juvenile polyarthritis (RF-negative), JSpA juvenile spondyloarthritis (including enthesitis related arthritis)
ANA-Ab antinuclear antibodies
DMARD disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug
mainly methotrexate (MTX), other DMARDS: leflunomide, sulphasalazine (SSZ), hydroxychloroquine, cyclosporine A (CyA)
- Ten patients had ≥1 DMARD (usually MTX + SSZ), one patient had CyA with SSZ
NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
Diagnoses of the patients and proportion of patients with abdominal pain, NSAID usage, and their ESR and FC values
| All patients | Abdominal pain | NSAID usage | ESR mm/h range (median) elevated ( | FC μg/g range (median) elevated ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JIA patients | ||||
| Oligoarthritis (33) | 13 (39%) | 15 (45%) | 1–80 (12) | 1–368 (17) |
| Polyarthritis (29) | 11 (38%) | 14 (48%) | 1–94 (16) | 2–1617 (34) |
| JSpA* (8) | 1 (13%) | 5 (63%) | 10–35 (19) | 11–184 (18) |
| All JIA (70) | 27 (39%) | 34 (70%) | 1–94 (15) | 1–1617 (25) |
| Arthralgia (20) | 12 (60%) | 12 (60%) | 7–50 (10) | 0–113 (32) |
JIA juvenile idiopathic arthritis
*JSpA juvenile spondylarthritis
NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate
FC fecal calprotectin, cut-off of 100 μg/g for elevated values [17–19]
Fig. 2Arthralgia patients with elevated FC-values and/or regular NSAID use and/or abdominal pain. Of the 20 patients with arthralgia 12 had abdominal pain of which eight used NSAIDs (overlapping areas). See text for details
FC-values of the JIA patients in relation to their abdominal pain, NSAID usage, and ESR values
| All JIA patients | Abdominal pain | NSAID usage | elevated ESR |
|---|---|---|---|
| FC 0–50 μg/g ( | 38% | 43% | 41% |
| FC 50–100 μg/g ( | 50% | 83% | 83% |
| FC 100–200 μg/g ( | 50% | 60% | 70% |
| FC > 200 μg/g ( | 100% | 67% | 67% |
JIA juvenile idiopathic arthritis
NSAID non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate
FC fecal calprotectin
Fig. 1JIA patients with elevated FC-values and/or regular NSAID use and/or abdominal pain. Of the 70 patients with JIA 48 had elevated FC value and/or NSAID use and/or abdominal pain. The numbers in overlapping areas show the combinations e.g. JIA patients having both abdominal pain and elevated FC values (n = 8), and four of them used NSAIDs as regular bases. See the text for other details