| Literature DB >> 29592918 |
Tamas Constantin1, Ivan Foeldvari2, Jordi Anton3, Joke de Boer4, Severine Czitrom-Guillaume5, Clive Edelsten6, Raz Gepstein7, Arnd Heiligenhaus8,9, Clarissa A Pilkington10, Gabriele Simonini11, Yosef Uziel12, Sebastian J Vastert13, Nico M Wulffraat13, Anne-Mieke Haasnoot4, Karoline Walscheid8, Annamária Pálinkás1, Reshma Pattani6, Zoltán Györgyi1, Richárd Kozma1, Victor Boom14, Andrea Ponyi1, Angelo Ravelli15, Athimalaipet V Ramanan16.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2012, a European initiative called Single Hub and Access point for pediatric Rheumatology in Europe (SHARE) was launched to optimise and disseminate diagnostic and management regimens in Europe for children and young adults with rheumatic diseases. Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common rheumatic disease in children and uveitis is possibly its most devastating extra-articular manifestation. Evidence-based guidelines are sparse and management is mostly based on physicians' experience. Consequently, treatment practices differ widely, within and between nations.Entities:
Keywords: Tnf-alpha; juvenile idiopathic arthritis; methotrexate
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29592918 PMCID: PMC6059050 DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2018-213131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Rheum Dis ISSN: 0003-4967 Impact factor: 19.103
Figure 1Summary of search strategy for identification of key articles.
Recommendations for diagnosis and screening in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-related uveitis
| Recommendation | L | S | Agreement (%) | References |
| 1. All patients in whom a diagnosis of JIA is being considered should be screened for uveitis according to a contemporary and audited protocol. Formal screening protocol should be administered in all centres, where patients with JIA are seen. | 2A | B | 100 |
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| 2. Frequency of ophthalmological follow-up visits must be based on disease severity and needs to be decided in conjunction with an expert ophthalmologist. | 4 | D | 100 |
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| 3. Patients with JIA stopping any systemic immunosuppressant are at risk of developing new onset uveitis or recurrence of uveitis after a prolonged remission. After stopping systemic immunosuppression, it is recommended that all patients with JIA are screened by an ophthalmologist at least every three months for at least 1 year. | 2B | B | 100 |
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Agreement indicates the % of experts that agreed on the recommendation during the final voting round of the consensus meeting.
1A, meta-analysis of cohort studies; 1B, meta-analysis of case–control studies; 2A, cohort studies; 2B, case–control studies; 3, non-comparative descriptive studies; 4, expert opinion; A, based on level 1 evidence; B, based on level 2 or extrapolated from level 1; C, based on level 3 or extrapolated from level 1 or 2; D, based on level 4 or extrapolated from level 3 or 4 expert opinion. L, level of evidence; S, strength of evidence.
Recommendations for treatment in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-related uveitis
| L | S | Agreement (%) | References | |
| 9. Active uveitis in JIA usually requires immediate treatment. | 2B | B | 100 |
|
| 10. Topical corticosteroids (preferably prednisolone acetate or dexamethasone) are the first-line treatment of anterior uveitis. | 4 | D | 100 |
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| 11. Topical and systemic NSAIDs have no demonstrable effect as monotherapy, but may be used as additional therapy. | 3 | C | 92 |
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| 12. Systemic immunosuppression in active uveitis is recommended if poor prognostic factors are present at the first visit. Poor prognostic factors including lack of remission later on during the disease course require systemic immunosuppression. | 2A | 100 |
| |
| 13. Systemic immunosuppression is recommended if inactivity could not be reached within 3 months or inflammation is reactivating during steroid dose reduction. | 2B | B | 100 |
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| 14. Methotrexate is the first choice as systemic immunosuppression. | 4 | D | 100 |
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| 15. In case of methotrexate inefficacy or intolerance, adding or switching to biological treatment is recommended. | 3 | C | 92 |
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| 16. The use of anti-TNF treatment strategies | 3 | C | 100 |
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| 17. Based on the current evidence, etanercept should not be considered for JIA-associated uveitis. | 1B | A | 100 |
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| 18. Switching between different anti-TNF treatments might be valuable if uveitis is refractory to the first anti-TNF, even though the present evidence comes from small case series or inception cohorts. | 3 | C | 100 |
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| 19. In case of lack of efficacy, consider testing for antidrug antibodies and drug trough level. If the patient has no antibodies but has low trough levels, consider increasing the dose or shortening the interval. | 4 | D | 100 | |
| 20. Tocilizumab, rituximab and abatacept might be potential options for cases refractory to previous anti-TNF therapy. | 3 | C | 100 |
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Agreement indicates the % of experts that agreed on the recommendation during the final voting round of the consensus meeting.
1A, meta-analysis of cohort studies; 1B, meta-analysis of case–control studies; 2A, controlled study without randomisation; 2B, quasi-experimental study; 3, descriptive study; 4, expert opinion; A, based on level 1 evidence; B, based on level 2 or extrapolated from level 1; C, based on level 3 or extrapolated from level 1 or 2; D, based on level 4 or extrapolated from level 3 or 4 expert opinion.; DMARD, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; L, level of evidence; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; S, strength of evidence; TNF, tumour necrosis factor.
Recommendations for disease activity measurement in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-related uveitis
| L | S | Agreement (%) | References | |
| 4. There should be good communication between the ophthalmologist and the paediatric rheumatologist concerning changes in disease activity treatment changes and responsibility for treatment monitoring. | 3 | C | 100 |
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| 5. There is a need to develop shared outcome measures to help guide decisions on systemic treatment. | 4 | D | 100 | |
| 6. At present, there is no validated biomarker to follow the activity of uveitis. | 2A | B | 100 |
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| 7. At present, no widely accepted definition of inactive disease for JIA-related uveitis is available. The goal of treating JIA-associated uveitis should be no cells in the anterior chamber. The presence of macular and/or disk oedema, ocular hypotony and rubeosis iridis may require anti-inflammatory treatment even in the absence of AC cells. | 2B | B | 100 |
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| 8. We recommend 2 years of inactive disease off topical steroids before reducing systemic immunosuppression (both DMARDs and biological therapies). | 3 | C | 92 |
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Agreement indicates the % of experts that agreed on the recommendation during the final voting round of the consensus meeting.
1A, meta-analysis of cohort studies; 1B, meta-analysis of case–control studies; 2A, cohort studies; 2B, case–control studies; 3, non-comparative descriptive studies; 4, expert opinion; A, based on level 1 evidence; B, based on level 2 or extrapolated from level 1; C, based on level 3 or extrapolated from level 1 or 2; D, based on level 4 or extrapolated from level 3 or 4 expert opinion. DMARD, disease-modifying anti rheumatic drugs; L, level of evidence; S, strength of evidence.
Recommendations for future plans in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-related uveitis
| L | S | Agreement (%) | References | |
| 21. Validated outcome measures for JIA-associated uveitis are needed | 3 | C | 100 |
|
| 22. Controlled clinical trials are needed for JIA-associated uveitis | 1B | A | 100 |
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Agreement indicates the % of experts that agreed on the recommendation during the final voting round of the consensus meeting.
1A, meta-analysis of cohort studies; 1B, meta-analysis of case–control studies; 2A, cohort studies; 2B, case–control studies; 3, non-comparative descriptive studies; 4, expert opinion (diagnostic studies); 1A, meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials; 1B, randomised controlled study; 2A, controlled study without randomisation; 2B, quasi-experimental study; 3, descriptive study; 4, expert opinion (therapeutic studies); A, based on level 1 evidence; B, based on level 2 or extrapolated from level 1; C, based on level 3 or extrapolated from level 1 or 2; D, based on level 4 or extrapolated from level 3 or 4 expert opinion, level of evidence; S, strength of evidence.
Proposed domains and items for outcome measures of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)-associated uveitis (from the Multinational Working Group in JIA-related uveitis)74
| Domains | Items |
| Grade of cells in anterior chamber | Slit-lamp examination (according to SUN criteria) |
| Grade of flare in anterior chamber | Slit-lamp examination for routine clinical practice and prospective trials (according to SUN criteria) |
| Number of visits with active uveitis | Records of treating physician Duration of activity over a minimum of four visits/year |
| Visual acuity (appropriate test for age) | Best-corrected visual acuity |
| Development of structural complications | Synechiae, yes/no Initial and additional Funduscopy and optical coherence tomography for routine clinical practice (for macula and optic disc) Funduscopy and optical coherence tomography for prospective trials Funduscopy for routine clinical practice Funduscopy and optical coherence tomography for prospective trials |
| Quality of life | Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire |
| Overall uveitis-related disability | Assessment by parents, visual analogue scale |
| Social outcome | School/kindergarten absence |
| Anti-inflammatory medication | Reduction of corticosteroid dose—topical dose—systemic dose |
| Surgery | Yes/no |
| Biomarkers | Research tools (not currently available |
*Not an outcome measure, but should be documented.
SUN, Standardization of Uveitis Nomenclature.