| Literature DB >> 33721267 |
Yulu Li1, Xiaolan Mao1, Xuemei Tang1, Huawei Mao2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: To investigate the efficacy and safety of anti-TNFα therapy in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis associated uveitis (JIA-U).Entities:
Keywords: Anti-TNFα therapy; Efficacy; Juvenile idiopathic arthritis; Meta-analysis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33721267 PMCID: PMC8217376 DOI: 10.1007/s40744-021-00296-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Ther ISSN: 2198-6576
Fig. 1The flow diagram of literature identification. ADA adalimumab, IFX infliximab, ETA etanercept, GLM golimumab, CZP certolizumab pegol
Basic characteristics of the studies included
| Source | Study type | Patients | Treatment group (no. of participants, F/M) | Control group (no. of participants, F/M) | Age, years | Length of follow-up (months) | Control of intraocular inflammation (TG vs CG) | Visual acuity | Corticosteroid sparing (TG vs CG) | AEs and SAEs (TG vs CG) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ramanan, et al. [ | RCT, DB | 90 | ADA (60, 47/13) 20 mg/0.8 ml for participants weighing < 30 kg or 40 mg/0.8 ml for participants weighing ≥ 30 kg | Placebo (30, 23/7) | 8.9 | 18 | Number of participants failing treatment (14/60 vs 17/30) (RR 0.40, 95% CI 0.23–0.72; | NA | 4/7vs2/2 | AEs 59 vs 26 The rate of AEs (10.60 per PY, 95% CI 9.77–11.44 per PY)vs (7.12 per PY, 95% CI 5.89–8.53 per PY) SAEs 13 vs 2 The rate of SAEs (0.29 per PY vs 0.19 per PY) |
| Quartier et al. [ | RCT, DB | 31 | ADA (16, 15/1) 24 mg/m2 in patients aged < 13 years, 40 mg in the others, every other week | Placebo (15, 13/2) | 9.5 (4.9–29.1) | 12 | 30% reduction of Inflammation on LFP: 9/16 vs 3/15 (P = 0.038, | logMAR: 0.1 (− 0.2 to 1.3) to 0.15 (− 0.10 to 1.10) | NA | NA |
| Janine A. Smith et al. [ | RCT, DB | 12 | ETA (7, 4/3) 0.4 mg/kg to a maximum of 25 mg subcutaneously twice weekly for 6 months | Placebo (5, 5/0) | 11 (6–15) | 6 | AC cells to 0 or topical corticosteroid < 3 times/day or 50% reduction in number or dose of other anti-inflammatory medications: 3 (95% CI 0.10–0.82) vs 2 (95% CI 0.05–0.85) ( | NA | 0/2vs0/2 | AEs: 5 vs 3 No SAEs |
| Eachempati, et al. [ | Retrospective case report | 1 | IFX (1, 1/0) four-weekly infliximab infusions at a dose of 6 mg/Kg | NA | 15 | NA | NA | NA | NA | SAE:1 transient acute coronary syndrome and arrhythmias |
| Clement et al. [ | Retrospective case series (conference abstract) | 8 | ADA (8, 5/3) 40 mg/m2 every 2 weeks | NA | 10 | 17.4 | NA | Stable 7, improved 1 | NA | No AEs and SAEs |
| Cecchin et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 154 | ADA (95, 16/79) subcutaneously every 2 weeks at a dosage of 1 mg/kg (max 40 mg) | IFX (59, 15/44) 5 mg/kg, 0, 2, 6, and 12 weeks, and then every 6–8 weeks | 9.5 (5.2 uveitis onset) | 24 | Clinical remission: the absence of flares for > 6 months on systemic treatment, with or without minimal topical treatment:57vs12 | NA | NA | AEs:15 vs 5 (10.6/100 PY vs 25.0/100 PY) ADA: 7 infections; 1 infusion reactions; 11 systemic symptoms IFX: 8 infections; 1 infusion reactions; 7 systemic symptoms No SAEs |
| Lazarević et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 11 Two subtypes: oligoarticular or enthesitis-related JIA 3vs8 | ADA (11, 8/3) 24 mg/m2 in two weeks intervals | NA | 14.5 (9–18) | 24 | No relapse:11 | NA | NA | No AEs and SAEs |
| Alicia et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 5 | ADA (5, 4/1) 24 mg/m2 every 2 weeks subcutaneously, (maximum dose 40 mg) | NA | 11.8 | 40.6 | SUN improved activity: 5 | Improved 1 Stable 3 Worse 1 | NA | AEs:2 Appendicitis Varicella No SAEs |
| Zannin et al. [ | Prospective cohort study | 85 | ADA (43, 36/7) Every 2 weeks at a dosage of 1 mg/kg (maximum 40 mg). Refractory to treatment progressively increased to a maximum of 40 mg | IFX (42, 35/13) 5 mg/kg at 0, 2, 6, and 12 weeks and continued every 6–8 weeks; refractory to treatment, shorter intervals (maximum every 4 weeks) | 9.7 (4.9 uveitis onset) | 12 | Clinical remission: the absence of active uveitis for more than 6 months on systemic treatment and with no or minimal topical treatment ADA vs IFX: 29 vs 18 | NA | NA | The rate of AEs: 4.7 vs 18.8 per 100 PY ADA: 2 systemic symptoms (urticarial rash, Prolonged menses) IFX: 3 infections, (upper respiratory tract, herpes zoster virus, urinary tract); 3 urinary tracts; 3 systemic symptoms (2 headaches, 1 irritability) No SAEs |
| Bravo-Ljubetic et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 10 | ADA (10, NA) 40 mg in children weighing ≥ 30 kg, 20 mg in children weighing < 30 kg every 2 weeks | NA | 9.21 | 42.4 | SUN improved activity: 10 | NA | NA | NA |
| Tynjala et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 20 Seventeen (85%) patients had polyarticular JIA | ADA (20, 16/4) subcutaneously every 2 weeks (40 mg to 18/20 patients and 20 mg to two patients weighting < 30 kg) | NA | 13.3 | 18.7 (4.5–35.6) | SUN improved activity: 7 | NA | 7/12 | AEs: NA Upper respiratory infection 55% Local skin reaction 25% Sinusitis 15% No SAEs |
| Biester et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 17 | ADA (17, 14/3) 0–40 mg every two weeks depending on body weight | NA | 5.8 (2–19) | 16.8 | No relapse or more than 2 relapses less than before treatment:16 | NA | 15/17 | AEs:7 Mild local reaction (2) Burning sensations (3) Pain around the injection site (2) SAEs: 1 elevation of liver enzymes |
| Tugal-Tutkun, et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 7 | IFX (7, 4/3) 5 mg/kg, 0, 2, and 6, and repeated every 8 weeks | NA | 6.8 (4–11) | 34 | SUN improved activity: 6 | Improved 5 Stable 2 | 3/3 | AEs:1 mild infusion reaction and herpes zoster |
| Tynjala et al. [ | Retrospective cohort study | 45 | ETA (24,NA) 0.4 mg/kg twice weekly subcutaneously | IFX (21, NA) 3–6 mg/kg intravenously, initially at 2, 4, and 6-week intervals, and later based On the response every 4–8 weeks | 5.6 (1.3–16.9) | 24 | International Uveitis Study Group standard: 5 vs 9 | NA | NA | AEs: NA SAEs 4 vs 3 ETA: pneumonia, unspecified abdominal infection, sight-threatening macular edema, retinal ablation IFX: peritonsillar abscess, pansinusitis, alopecia with highly increased ANA and DNA antibodies |
| Rajaraman et al. [ | Retrospective case report | 3 | IFX (3, 2/1) 5 mg/kg, 0, 2, and 6, and repeated every 8 weeks | NA | 6.5 | 14.2 | SUN improved activity: 2 | Improved 2 Worse 1 | 1/1 | AEs:1 Bronchospastic cough No SAEs |
| Richards et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 6 | IFX (6, 5/1) 5 and 10 mg/kg at weeks 0, 2, and 4, and thereafter 6–8 weekly | NA | 11.6 (7.5–17) | 27 | SUN improved activity: 6 | NA | 6/6 | AE:2 Itching, sneezing, and rhinorrhea pityriasis versicolor SAE 0 |
| Saeed et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 9 | ETA (9, 6/3) subcutaneous injection at a dosage of 0.4 mg/kg (maximum dosage of 25 mg) twice a week | NA | 11 | NA | SUN improved activity: 6 | Worse 2 Stable 7 | NA | NA |
| Smith et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 3 | ETA (3, 2/1) 0.4 mg/kg twice weekly by subcutaneously | NA | 18.7 | 12 | Decrease cell counts by slit-lamp biomicroscopy: 1 | Improved 0 Stable 2 Worse 1 | NA | No AEs andSAEs |
| Palmou-Fontana et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 7 | GLM (7, 5/2) 50 mg/every 4 weeks subcutaneously | NA | 21.7 ± 7.5 | 6 | Complete remission: 4 | BCVA: 0.5 to 0.62 (p = 0.018) | NA | AEs: 2 Local erythema at the injection site |
| Miserocchi et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 13 | GLM (13, 10/3) 50 mg monthly subcutaneously | NA | 23.1 | 22.4 | Without uveitis at last visit: 9 | Improved 3 Stable 10 Worse 0 | 5/7 | AEs: 2 Pulmonary infection Skin reaction |
| Sanna Leinonen et al. [ | Retrospective case report | 3 | CZP(3,2/1) Every 2 weeks Starting with a loading dose of 400 mg 3 times and continued with a dose of 200 mg | NA | 18.6 (15, 24, 17) | 11 (9, 10, 14) | SUN improved activity: 3 | NA | NA | NA |
RCT randomized clinical trials, DB double-blinded, F/M female/male, NA not available, PY patient-year, TG treatment group, CG control group, AE adverse event, SAE serious adverse event, logMAR logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution, ADA Adalimumab, IFX Infliximab, ETA Etanercept, CZP Certolizumab pegol, GLM Golimumab, LFP laser flare photometry, AC anterior chamber, BCVA best-corrected visual acuity
Fig. 2Forest plot on the pooled proportion of intraocular inflammation control with the treatment of adalimumab (a), infliximab (b), etanercept (c), respectively. As I2 statistic showed the obvious heterogeneity of the studies, random-effects model were used to present the pooled results
Fig. 3Funnel plots on intraocular inflammation control in children with JIA-U regarding to adalimumab (ADA), infliximab (IFX), etanercept (ETA)
Differences in the pooled proportion of intraocular inflammation control between adalimumab, infliximab, etanercept
| Adalimumab | Infliximab | Etanercept | Chi-square | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 82% | 56% | 26.24 | < 0.001 | |
| 82% | 38% | 13.43 | < 0.001 | |
| 56% | 38% | 0.13 | 0.71 |
| Juvenile idiopathic arthritis(JIA) is the commonest rheumatic disease in children and uveitis is the commonest extra-articular manifestation of it. JIA associated uveitis(JIA-U) is still a big challenge for pediatric rheumatologists and ophthalmologists due to its insidious onset, sight-threatening complications and high refractory risk. In those who are refractory to topical glucocorticoids and methotrexate, anti-tumor necrosis factor α (anti-TNFα) therapy is recommended by guidelines nowadays. However, high quality evidence of which anti-TNFα drug to choose and whether the choice is safe is still lacking. |
| Thus, a systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to evaluate the efficacy and safety of anti-TNFα therapy in the treatment of JIA-U. |
| The existing evidence suggests that adalimumab is the best anti-TNFα therapy for JIA-U treatment. Adalimumab is significantly better than infliximab and etanercept in the control of intraocular inflammation. Adalimumab is also better than infliximab in improving visual acuity and remaining in remission. |
| The efficacy of infliximab is higher than etanercept but with no statistical difference. Golimumab and certolizumab pegol may be proxies for adalimumab, but further evidence is needed. |
| Most reported adverse events of anti-TNFα therapy were tolerable. Some severe adverse events were reported but malignancy wasn’t seen during the JIA-U treatment. |