| Literature DB >> 31296171 |
Ya-Chiao Hu1, Yao-Hsu Yang2, Yu-Tsan Lin1, Li-Chieh Wang1, Hsin-Hui Yu1, Jyh-Hong Lee1, Bor-Luen Chiang1.
Abstract
BACKGROUNDS: Behçet's disease (BD) is a rare vasculitic disorder affecting all sizes of vessels. Among BD patients, 4 to 25% of patients with diagnosed age younger than 16 years old are defined as juvenile BD (JBD). This study aimed to evaluate the clinical manifestations and treatments of patients with JBD, with a particular focus on the effectiveness and safety of anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-TNF alpha therapy; Behçet’s disease; Children; Taiwan
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31296171 PMCID: PMC6621989 DOI: 10.1186/s12887-019-1613-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Characteristics of the patients with juvenile Behçet’s disease (n = 55)
| Characteristic | ||
|---|---|---|
| Male gender, n (%) | 22 | (40.0) |
| Age at disease onset (years) | 11 | (0.1–16.0) |
| Age at diagnosis (years) | 13 | (0.1–16.0) |
| Time to diagnosis (years) | 0 | (0.0–8.0) |
| Diagnosis criteria, n (%) | ||
| ICBD | 50 | (90.9) |
| PEDBD | 20 | (36.4) |
| No criteria met | 5 | (9.1) |
| Clinical presentations, n (%) | ||
| Recurrent oral aphthous ulcers | 55 | (100) |
| Genital ulceration | 38 | (69.1) |
| Skin involvement | 20 | (36.4) |
| Ocular involvement | 15 | (27.3) |
| Neurologic signs | 2 | (3.6) |
| Vascular signs | 1 | (1.8) |
| Gastrointestinal symptoms | 16 | (29.1) |
| Arthritis/arthralgia | 15 | (27.3) |
For quantitative and ordinal data median and range are presented
ICBD International Criteria for Behçet’s Disease, PEDBD Pediatric Behçet’s Disease
Systemic treatments in patients with juvenile Behçet’s disease
| Patients receiving treatment at any time, n (%) | Patients receiving first-line systemic therapy, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Colchicine | 30 (54.5) | 24 (43.6) |
| Oral prednisolone | 41 (74.5) | 31 (56.4) |
| NSAIDs | 17 (30.9) | – |
| Mesalazine/Sulfasalazine | 19 (34.5) | 6 (10.9) |
| Hydroxychloroquine | 12 (21.8) | 7 (12.7) |
| Azathioprine | 17 (30.9) | 2 (3.6) |
| Cyclosporine | 11 (20.0) | – |
| Methotrexate | 1 (1.8) | – |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | 2 (3.6) | – |
| Adalimumab | 2 (3.6) | – |
| Etanercept | 4 (7.3) | – |
NSAID nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug
Comparison of the characteristics of the patients with juvenile Behçet’s disease who were and were not treated with anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha therapy
| Characteristic | Treatment with anti-TNF-α ( | No anti-TNF-α therapy ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender, n (%) | 3 | (50.0) | 19 | (38.8) | 0.674 |
| Age at disease onset (years) | 7.0 | (0.25–13.0) | 12 | (0.1–16.0) | 0.029* |
| Age at diagnosis (years) | 7.5 | (2.0–13.0) | 13 | (0.1–16.0) | 0.012* |
| Time to diagnosis (years) | 1 | (0.0–2.8) | 0 | (0.0–8.0) | 0.553 |
| Clinical presentation, n (%) | |||||
| Recurrent oral aphthous ulcers | 6 | (100.0) | 49 | (100.0) | 1.000 |
| Genital ulceration | 5 | (83.3) | 33 | (67.3) | 0.654 |
| Skin involvement | 2 | (33.3) | 18 | (36.7) | 1.000 |
| Ocular involvement | 2 | (33.3) | 13 | (26.5) | 0.638 |
| Neurologic signs | 1 | (16.7) | 2 | (4.1) | 0.298 |
| Vascular signs | 0 | (0.0) | 1 | (2.0) | 1.000 |
| Gastrointestinal symptoms | 4 | (66.7) | 11 | (22.4) | 0.041* |
| Arthritis/arthralgia | 4 | (66.7) | 12 | (24.5) | 0.053 |
| Laboratory data at diagnosis | |||||
| WBC count (× 103/ΜL) | 11.8 | (5.0–18.0) | 8.8 | (3.8–18.6) | 0.339 |
| Hemoglobin, g/L | 11.5 | (10.3–14.1) | 13.1 | (10–14.7) | 0.060 |
| Platelet count (× 103/ΜL) | 386 | (212.0–570.0) | 294.5 | (170.0–576.0) | 0.098 |
| C-reaction protein (mg/dL) | 6 | (2.5–10.5) | 0.4 | (0.0–20.0) | 0.025* |
| ESR (mm/h) | 29 | (9.0–50.0) | 18.5 | (2.0–90.0) | 0.314 |
| Medications used at any time | |||||
| Prednisolone, n (%) | 6 | (100) | 35 | (71.4) | 0.320 |
| Colchicine, n (%) | 2 | (33.3) | 28 | (57.1) | 0.394 |
| NSAIDs, n (%) | 3 | (50) | 14 | (28.6) | 0.359 |
| DMARDs‡, n (%) | 4 | (66.7) | 21 | (42.9) | 0.394 |
| Immunosuppressive agents#, n (%) | 6 | (100) | 15 | (30.6) | 0.002* |
| Rheumatologic drugs, n | 4 | (2–7) | 2 | (0–6) | 0.010* |
For quantitative and ordinal data median and range are presented
TNF tumor necrosis factor, WBC white blood cell, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, NSAID nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, DMARD disease-modifying antirheumatic drug
‡ Included hydroxychloroquine, mesalazine, and sulfasalazine
# Included cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil, methotrexate, and azathioprine
*A value of P < 0.05 was considered statically significant
Clinical characteristics of juvenile Behçet’s disease patients treated with anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha therapy and response of the treatment
| Case | Sex | Previous treatments | Duration of steroid use before aTNF (years) | Type of aTNF | Duration of aTNF (years) | Reasons for use of aTNF | Treatment responses | Side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | F | PD, AZA | 7.0 | ETN | 3.2 | Frequent fever, oral ulcer, enteritis. Frequent hospitalizations. | Fever subsided and ESR level returned to normal range within 1 year. Steroid was discontinued for 2.8 years. One BD flare after tapering ETN. | Herpes zoster, pneumonia |
| #2 | F | PD, 5-ASA, colchicine | 3.3 | ETN | 2.4 | Steroid-dependent disease status with oral ulcers and GI bleeding. | Hgb and CRP level returned to normal range within 4 months. Steroid was discontinued 6 months later. One BD flare after tapering ETN | None |
| #3 | F | PD, AZA Colchicine | 1.6 | ADA | 1.0 | Recurrent uveitis, oral and genital ulceration. | Improved uveitis and vessel leakage. VA remained stationary. | None |
| #4 | M | PD, AZA | 0.6 | ETN | 7.8 | Refractory oral ulcer, gastrointestinal symptoms. | Improved clinical symptoms; CRP and ESR returned to normal range. PD and AZA were discontinued within 1 year. | Recurrent sinusitis |
| #5 | M | PD, HCQ, CsA, AZA | 0.8 | ADA | 1.4 | Steroid-dependent uveitis. | Uveitis subsided with VA improvement. Persistent oral ulcer, high ESR and CRP levels. | None |
| #6 | M | PD, 5-ASA | 5.8 | ETN | 2.7 | Neurologic involvement. Steroid dependent disease status with poor drug compliance. | Improved arthralgia, oral ulcer and bloody stool. CRP level returned to normal range. All drugs were discontinued after 6 months. | None |
aTNF anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha therapy, PD prednisolone, HCQ hydroxychloroquine, AZA azathioprine, 5-ASA mesalazine, CsA cyclosporine, ETN Etanercept, ADA Adalimumab, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate, CRP C-reactive protein, Hgb Hemoglobin, VA visual acuity
Fig. 1Effect of anti-tumor necrosis factor-alpha therapy in patients with juvenile Behçet’s disease on (a) corticosteroid sparing, (b) the immunosuppression load score and (c) serial change of Behçet’s Disease Current Activity Form transformed index scores. (TNF: tumor necrosis factor; BDCAF: Behçet’s Disease Current Activity Form)
Review of reported cases with juvenile Behçet’s disease who received anti-tumor necrosis factor alpha therapy in the literature
| Case | Sex | Age at diagnosis | Age at aTNF | aTNF | Major organ involvement | Efficacy | Side effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | 13 | 15 | IFX | Intestinal lesion | (+) | None | Saulsbury et al. (2003), USA [ |
| 2 | Male | nr | 12 | IFX | Budd-Chiari syndrome | (−) | None | Seyahi et al. (2007), Turkey [ |
| 3 | Male | 15 | 15 | IFX | Budd-Chiari syndrome | (−) | None | |
| 4 | Female | 13 | 15 | IFX | Ocular lesion | (+) | None | Evereklioglu et al. (2007), Turkey [ |
| 5 | Female | 10 | 11 | ETN | Ocular lesion | (+) | Fever | Cantarini et al. (2009), Italy [ |
| 6 | Female | 9 | 13 | ETN | Cutaneous lesion | (+) | Bacterial endocarditis | |
| 7 | Male | 12 | 14 | ETN | Cutaneous lesion | (+) | None | |
| 8 | Female | 11 | 13 | ETN | Cutaneous lesion | (+) | Fatigue | |
| 9 | Male | 8 | 18 | IFX | Intestinal lesion | (+) | None | Kaneko et al. (2010), Japan [ |
| 10 | Female | 4 | 9 | ETN | Cutaneous lesion | (+) | None | |
| 11 | Female | 10 | 12 | ADA | Central nervous system | (+) | None | Robinson et al. (2010), USA [ |
| 12 | Female | 5 | 5 | IFX | Intestinal lesion | nra | Infusion reaction | Watanabe et al. (2013), Japan [ |
| ETN | (+) | None |
aTNF anti-Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha therapy, ETN Etanercept, ADA Adalimumab, IFX Infliximab, nr not reported
a IFX in this case was discontinued due to drug infusion reaction