| Literature DB >> 29357887 |
Claas H Hinze1, Dirk Holzinger2,3, Elke Lainka4, Johannes-Peter Haas5, Fabian Speth5, Tilmann Kallinich6, Nikolaus Rieber7,8, Markus Hufnagel9, Annette F Jansson10, Christian Hedrich11,12,13, Hanna Winowski14, Thomas Berger15, Ivan Foeldvari16, Gerd Ganser14, Anton Hospach17, Hans-Iko Huppertz18, Kirsten Mönkemöller19, Ulrich Neudorf4, Elisabeth Weißbarth-Riedel20, Helmut Wittkowski2, Gerd Horneff21,22, Dirk Foell2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) is an autoinflammatory disease associated with chronic arthritis. Early diagnosis and effective therapy of SJIA is desirable, so that complications are avoided. The PRO-KIND initiative of the German Society for Pediatric Rheumatology (GKJR) aims to define consensus-based strategies to harmonize diagnostic and therapeutic approaches in Germany.Entities:
Keywords: Biologics; Diagnosis; Glucocorticoids; Interleukin-1 blockade; Interleukin-6 blockade; Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis; Treat-to-target
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29357887 PMCID: PMC5778670 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-018-0224-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Clinical parameters of patients diagnosed with SJIA within the German AID registry and ICON-JIA
| German AID registry ( | ICON-JIA ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Number of patients in whom parameter is available | Number of patients in whom the parameter is positive (%) | Number of patients in whom parameter is available | Number of patients in whom the parameter is positive (%) |
| Fever | 207 | 202 (97.6%) | 35 | 35 (100%) |
| Arthritis | 207 | 124 (59.9%) | 35 | 20 (57.1%) |
| Arthralgia (but not arthritis) | 207 | 76 (36.7%) | 35 | 2 (5.7%) |
| Rash | 207 | 149 (72.0%) | 35 | 30 (85.7%) |
| Serositis | 207 | 38 (18.4%) | 35 | 6 (17.1%) |
| Lymphadenopathy | 207 | 44 (21.3%) | 35 | 12 (34.3%) |
| Hepato- and/or splenomegaly | 207 | 48 (23.2%) | 35 | 16 (45.7%) |
| Pharyngitis | 207 | 7 (3.4%) | N/A | N/A |
| Leukocytosis (WBC > 10,000/mm3) | 154 | 129 (83.8%) | 33 | 21 (63.6%) |
| Leukocytosis (WBC > 15,000/mm3) | 154 | 92 (59.7%) | 33 | 10 (30.3%) |
| CRP ≥ 30 mg/l | 158 | 125 (79.1%) | 33 | 15 (45.5%) |
| ESR ≥ 50 mm/h | 122 | 90 (73.8%) | 26 | 12 (46.2%) |
| Marked systemic inflammationa | 115 | 110 (95.7%) | 35 | 19 (54.3%) |
| Extremely elevated S100 proteinsb | 30 | 23 (76.7%) | 19 | 5 (26.3%) |
AID Autoinflammatory disease, GKJR Society for Pediatric Rheumatology, ICON-JIA Inception cohort of newly diagnosed patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, ILAR International League of Associations for Rheumatology, N/A Data not available, SJIA Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis, WBC White blood cell count
aWBC > 15,000/mm3, C-reactive protein> 30 mg/l, and/or erythrocyte sedimentation rate > 50 mm/h
bExtremely elevated S100A8/A9 (> 10,000 ng/ml) or S100A12 (> 1500 ng/ml) serum level
Treatment patterns and disease courses of new-onset SJIA in Germany
| Database | National pediatric rheumatology database (2011–2013) | ICON-JIA (2010–2015) | AID registry (2008–2015) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number SJIA patients | 125 | 34 | 251 |
| Initial pharmacologic treatments | |||
| Timeframe assessed | Patients with disease duration of 12 months or less | At time of enrollment (within 12 months of disease onset) and within three months prior | In the first three months of treatment |
| NSAIDs | 55 (44.0%) | 29 (85.3%) | 145 (57,8%) |
| Systemic glucocorticoids | 75 (60.0%) | 33 (97.1%) | 178 (70.9%) |
| Intraarticular glucocorticoids | 6 (4.8%) | 4 (11.8%) | N/A |
| Methotrexate | 68 (54.4%) | 16 (47.1%) | 102 (40.6%) |
| Anakinra | 17 (13.6%) | 5 (14.7%) | 31 (12.4%) |
| Canakinumab | 5 (4.0%) | 2 (5.9%) | 7 (2.8%) |
| Tocilizumab | 12 (9.6%) | 2 (5.9%) | 12 (4.8%) |
| Adalimumab | 1 (0.8%) | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Etanercept | 2 (1.6%) | 1 (2.9%) | 6 (2.4%) |
| Cyclosporin A | 0 (0%) | 1 (2.9%) | 0 (0%) |
| Disease course | N/A | Inactive disease: | Sufficient data for 156 pts.: |
AID Autoinflammatory diseases, ICON-JIA Inception cohort of patients with new-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis, N/A Not available, NSAIDs Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, SJIA Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis
Consensus statements regarding the diagnosis and management of SJIA
| Statements | Consensus | Levels of evidence and grades of recommendationa |
|---|---|---|
| Statement 1 Strategies of the PRO-KIND SJIA project group apply to the following patients with new-onset disease: | ||
| (A) Patients with systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis according to ILAR categorization | 100% | 1a, A |
| (B) Patients with suspected SJIA who do not fulfill the ILAR criterion of arthritis | 100% | 4, D |
| Statement 2 | ||
| (A) The demonstration of systemic inflammation, i.e. usually elevated C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, leukocytes and/or ferritin) is essential for diagnosing SJIA at disease onset | 100% | 1b, A |
| (B) Measurement of specific autoantibodies may be useful in order to rule out other conditions. | 100% | 5, D |
| (C) Measurement of phagocyte-specific S100 proteins may be helpful to differentiate between SJIA and other diseases associated with fever. There is insufficient data in regards to interleukin-18 and procalcitonin for the diagnosis of SJIA. | 100% | 2b-4, C |
| Statement 3 | ||
| (A) Malignancies are important differential diagnoses for SJIA. If suspected, an extended panel of diagnostic tests, including chest radiography, ultrasound of the abdomen and lymph nodes, bone marrow aspiration, and, if appropriate, biopsy of lymph nodes or other involved organs should be pursued. The indication for bone marrow aspiration should be reviewed critically prior to initiating a glucocorticoid therapy. An elevated LDH, uric acid and cytopenias represent pertinent findings. | 100% | 5, D |
| (B) Infections are important differential diagnoses for SJIA. An adapted search for infections should be pursued (see guideline “Fever of unknown origin”). | 100% | 5, D |
| (C) Hereditary autoinflammatory syndromes are important differential diagnoses for SJIA. Molecular genetic testing should be pursued if clinical suspicion for a known hereditary autoinflammatory syndrome exists. | 91.7%b | 5, D |
| (D) There are no data from controlled studies regarding the utility of imaging studies in the diagnosis of SJIA. However, sonography and MRI are important modalities to assess joint and organ manifestations, to differentiate from other conditions and to monitor disease activity. | 100% | 5, D |
| (E) Generally, in case of insufficient response to antirheumatic therapies, especially glucocorticoids, interleukin-1 or interleukin-6 blockade, the diagnosis of SJIA has to be critically reconsidered. | 100% | 5, D |
| Statement 4 | ||
| (A) The overall treatment target is achieving a clinically inactive disease, ideally without glucocorticoids, and, eventually, clinical remission. Clinically inactive disease is aimed for within six to twelve months. | 100% | 2A |
| (B) The following interim targets are aimed for: | 100% | 2A |
| Statement 5 | ||
| (A) NSAIDs and DMARDS: Optionally, NSAIDs may be used for treating SJIA even though no data from randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials are available. The only approved DMARD for treating SJIA is methotrexate. | 92% | 4B |
| (B) Biologics: Positive data from clinical trials are available for IL-1 blockade (anakinra and canakinumab), IL-6 blockade (tocilizumab) and, in a limited fashion, TNF-alpha blockade (etanercept). | 90% | 1A |
| (C) Glucocorticoids: High-dose systemic glucocorticoids are an effective and proven treatment for SJIA. | 100% | 1A |
| (D) Intraarticular glucocorticoids may be used for treating arthritis in patients with SJIA. | 91% | 4C |
| Statement 6 | ||
| (A) Initial treatment: In patients with probable SJIA, high-dose systemic glucocorticoids may be used, either as i.v. pulse therapy and/or as daily glucocorticoids with subsequent dose reduction. Alternatively, anakinra may be used, even as a monotherapy without glucocorticoids. The use of canakinumab or tocilizumab is currently discussed. | 100% | 2A |
| (B) In case of inadequate response (interim targets not reached), i.v. pulse glucocorticoid therapy may be repeated, or an increased dose of anakinra may be considered. In case of initial exclusive glucocorticoid therapy, IL-1 blockade or IL-6 blockade may be introduced. In case of initial anakinra monotherapy, additional treatment with glucocorticoids or changing to another biologic may be considered. | 100% | 1A/2A |
| (C) In case of persistent or recurrent signs of systemic disease activity, biologics (IL-1 blockade or IL-6 blockade) may be introduced (especially in case of previous exclusive glucocorticoid therapy or a glucocorticoid-dependent disease course). If biologics were already introduced, a dose increase or a change of the biologic can be considered. | 100% | 1A/2A |
| (D) If arthritis should develop in patients with probably SJIA, the respective treatment strategy for patients with definitive SJIA is used. | 100% | 4B |
| Statement 7 | ||
| (A) In the case of SJIA with arthritis, high-dose systemic glucocorticoids may be used, either as i.v. pulse therapy and/or as daily glucocorticoids with subsequent dose reduction. Optionally, NSAIDs, methotrexate and intraarticular glucocorticoids may be employed. | 100% | 2A |
| (B) Alternatively, IL-1 or IL-6 blockade may be applied, possibly in combination with glucocorticoids and/or methotrexate. | 100% | 1A |
| (C) In case of insufficient treatment response (see treatment targets), i.v. glucocorticoid pulse therapy may be repeated, or IL-1 or IL-6 blocking agents may be increased in dose (if feasible). In case of initial glucocorticoid therapy, IL-1 or IL- blockade may be initiated. In case of initial biological monotherapy, glucocorticoids may be added (systemically or locally), the biological agent may be changed, or methotrexate may be added. | 100% | 1A |
| (D) In case of a predominant polyarticular arthritis and in case of lack of treatment response despite the utilization of the approved biological agents, second-line agents, e.g. TNF blockers (etanercept or adalimumab) or abatacept may be applied. In addition, the use of methotrexate is reasonable and intraarticular glucocorticoids may be applied. | 100% | 2B |
| (E) If MAS should develop in the context of SJIA, the corresponding treatment strategies are used. | 100% | 4C |
CRP C-reactive protein, DMARD Disease-modifying antirheumatic drug, IL Interleukin, ILAR International league of associations for rheumatology, MAS Macrophage activation syndrome, NSAIDs Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, SJIA Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis
aaccording to the Oxford Centre for Evidence-based Medicine
bconsensus was determined in a post-consensus meeting survey among 22 experts
Consensus approach to the categorization of definitive or probable SJIA
| Definitive SJIA | Probable SJIA | |
|---|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria | ||
| Typical fever patterna | +++ | +++ |
| Arthritis in at least one joint | +++ | – |
| Typical (evanescent erythematous) rash | + | + |
| Generalized lymphadenopathy | + | + |
| Hepatomegaly or splenomegaly | + | + |
| Serositis | + | + |
| Marked systemic inflammationb | – | +++ |
| Extremely elevated S100 proteins (calgranulins) | – | + |
| Exclusion criteria | ||
| Infection | X | X |
| Malignancy | X | X |
| Hereditary autoinflammatory syndrome | X | X |
| Requirements | All obligatory criteria are fulfilled and at least one minor criterion. | All obligatory and at least two minor criteria are fulfilled. |
+++: obligatory criterion; +: minor criterion; X: exclusion criterion
a fever of at least two weeks’ duration that is documented to be daily (“quotidian”) for at least three days
b marked elevation of C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, leukocytes/granulocytes and/or ferritin
- not specifically addressed in the definition
SJIA Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis
Fig. 1Treatment targets for the treatment of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Treatments should be reached sequentially. The physician global assessment is scored on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 represents lack of any disease activity and 10 represents maximal disease activity. The juvenile arthritis disease activity score (JADAS)-10 represents the sum of 4 individual scores, namely the physician global assessment (range 0–10), the patient or parent global assessment (range 0–10), the active joint count (range 0–10), and the normalized erythrocyte sedimentation rate after 1 h ([observed rate - 20]/100, i.e. values up to 20 mm/h are scored as 0 and values equal to or above 120 mm/h are scored as 10) or C-reactive protein (CRP; [observed CRP in mg/l – 10]/100, i.e. values up to 10 mg/l are scored as 0 and values equal to or above 110 mg/l are scored as 10)
Fig. 2Treat-to-target consensus treatment strategy for the initial therapy of probable systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA). Maximal doses for glucocorticoids: i.v. methylprednisolone pulse therapy (20–30 mg/kg/day [max. 1000 mg/day) for 5 days or prednisolone equivalent 1–2 mg/kg/day (max. 80 mg/day). “Biologic” refers to anakinra, canakinumab or tocilizumab. Maximal doses for biologics: anakinra 8 mg/kg/day (max. 300 mg/day), canakinumab max. 300 mg every 4 weeks, tocilizumab (for body weight > 30 kg) 8 mg/kg (max. 800 mg) i.v. every 2 weeks and (for body weight < 30 kg) 12 mg/kg every 2 weeks. In addition, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may be used for symptom relief throughout. Combination therapy with biologic agents is discouraged. Abbreviations: ANA, anakinra; CAN, canakinumab; CID, clinical inactive disease; GC, glucocorticoids; IVMP, intravenous methylprednisolone pulse; PDN, prednisone/prednisolone equivalent. *not addressed by these strategies. ↓ = decrease dose or frequency (taper); ↑ = increase dose or frequency
Fig. 3Treat-to-target consensus treatment strategy for definitive SJIA. Maximal doses for glucocorticoids: i.v. methylprednisolone pulse therapy (20–30 mg/kg/day [max. 1000 mg/day) for 5 days or prednisolone equivalent 1–2 mg/kg/day (max. 80 mg/day). “Biologic” refers to anakinra, canakinumab or tocilizumab. Maximal doses for biologics: anakinra 8 mg/kg/day (max. 300 mg/days), canakinumab 8 mg/kg (max. 600 mg) every 4 weeks, tocilizumab (for body weight > 30 kg) 8 mg/kg (max. 800 mg) i.v. every 2 weeks and (for body weight < 30 kg) 12 mg/kg every 2 weeks. In addition, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may be used for symptom relief throughout. Abbreviations: ANA, anakinra; CAN, canakinumab; CID, clinical inactive disease; GC, glucocorticoids; i.a., intraarticular; IVMP, intravenous methylprednisolone pulse; MTX, methotrexate; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug; PDN, prednisone/prednisolone equivalent; TCZ, tocilizumab; TNF, tumor necrosis factor-alpha. ↓ = decrease dose or frequency (taper); ↑ = increase dose or frequency