| Literature DB >> 34046584 |
Amra Adrovic1, Mehmet Yildiz1, Oya Köker1, Sezgin Şahin1, Kenan Barut1, Özgür Kasapçopur1.
Abstract
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is the most common rheumatic disease in childhood. The disease is divided in different subtypes based on main clinical features and disease course. Emergence of biological agents targeting specific pro-inflammatory cytokines responsible for the disease pathogenesis represents the revolution in the JIA treatment. Discovery and widespread usage of biological agents have led to significant improvement in JIA patients' treatment, with evidently increased functionality and decreased disease sequel. Increased risk of infections remains the main discussion topic for years. Despite the slightly increased frequency of upper respiratory tract infections reported in some studies, the general safety of drugs is acceptable with rare reports of severe adverse effects (SAEs). Tuberculosis (TBC) represents the important threat in regions with increased TBC prevalence. Therefore, routine screening for TBC should not be neglected when prescribing and during the follow-up of biological treatment. Malignancy represents a hypothetical complication that sometimes causes hesitations for physicians and patients in its prescription and usage. On the other hand, current reports from the literature do not support the increased risk for malignancy among JIA patients treated with biological agents. A multidisciplinary approach including a pediatric rheumatologist and an infectious disease specialist is mandatory in the follow- up of JIA patients. Although the efficacy and safety of biological agents have been proven in different studies, there is still a need for long-term, multicentric evaluation providing relevant data.Entities:
Keywords: Anakinra; canakinumab; etanercept; juvenile idiopathic arthritis; tocilizumab
Year: 2020 PMID: 34046584 PMCID: PMC8140868 DOI: 10.46497/ArchRheumatol.2021.7953
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Rheumatol ISSN: 2148-5046 Impact factor: 1.472
International League of Associations for Rheumatology classification of subtypes of juvenile idiopathic arthritis[1,4]
| JIA subtype | Definition and exclusion | ||
| 1. | Systemic onset JIA | Fever >2 weeks and arthritis in >1 joint, plus at least 1 of the following: | |
| 2 | Oligoarticular JIA | Arthritis in <4 joints during the first 6 months | (Exclusion criteria: a,b,c,d) |
| 3 | Polyarticular JIA | Arthritis in <4 joints during the first 6 months. | (Exclusion criteria: a,b,c,d,e) (Exclusion criteria: a,b,c,e) (Exclusion criteria: a,b,c,d,e) |
| 4 | Psoriatic arthritis | Arthritis + psoriasis or arthritis + at least 2 of the following: | (Exclusion criteria: b,c,d,e) |
| 5 | Enthesitis-related arthritis | Arthritis and/or enthesitis + at least 2 of the following: | (Exclusion criteria: a,d,e) |
| 6 | Undifferentiated arthritis | Fulfills none of the subsets above or fulfills more than 2 subsets above. | |
| JIA: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis; RF: Rheumatoid factor; HLA: Human leukocyte antigen; Exclusion criteria for juvenile idiopathic arthritis: (a) psoriasis or a history of psoriasis in patient or first-degree relative; (b) arthritis in a human leukocyte antigen-B27-positive male beginning after sixth birthday; (c) ankylosing spondylitis; enthesitis-related arthritis; sacroiliitis with inflammatory bowel disease; Reiter syndrome; or acute uveitis or history of one of these or in first-degree relative; (d) presence of immunoglobulin M rheumatoid factor on at least two occasions at least three months apart; (e) presence of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis in patient. | |||
Biological drugs used in treatment of juvenile idiopathic arthritis[1,2,5,12]
| Drugs | Mechanism of actions | Dose |
| Etanercept | TNF suppression, fusion protein TNF receptor suppression | 0.8 mg/kg/week or two times a week |
| Infliximab | TNF suppression, anti-TNF monoclonal chimeric antibody | 5-10 mg/kg/month (maximum 200 mg/month) |
| Adalimumab | TNF suppression, anti-TNF monoclonal antibody | <30 kg: 20 mg/every 2 weeks (24 mg/m2) |
| Anakinra | IL-1 receptor antagonist | 2-10 mg/kg/day (maximum 200 mg/day) |
| Canakinumab | Anti IL-1p monoclonal antibody | <40 kg: 4-6 mg/ kg/4-8 weeks |
| Rilonacept | IL-1 suppression; soluble fusion protein | 2.2-4.4 mg/kg/week |
| Tocilizumab | IL-6 receptor antagonist | <30 kg: 12 mg/kg 2-4 weeks |
| Abatacept | T-cell co-stimulator; soluble fusion protein | 10 mg/kg/4 weeks + (maximum dose 500 mg) |
| Rituximab | CD20 antigen suppression | 375 mg/m2/weeks, for 4 weeks (maximum dose 500 mg) |
| CD: Cluster of differentiation; IL: Interleukin; TNF: Tumor necrosis factor. | ||