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Disparities in the prevalence of clinical features between systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis and adult-onset Still's disease

Authors :
Piero Ruscitti
Valentina Natoli
Alessandro Consolaro
Roberta Caorsi
Silvia Rosina
Gabriella Giancane
Roberta Naddei
Ilenia Di Cola
Claudia Di Muzio
Onorina Berardicurti
Daniela Iacono
Ilenia Pantano
Gelsomina Rozza
Silvia Rossi
Ludovico De Stefano
Silvia Balduzzi
Antonio Vitale
Francesco Caso
Luisa Costa
Marcella Prete
Luca Navarini
Annamaria Iagnocco
Fabiola Atzeni
Giuliana Guggino
Federico Perosa
Luca Cantarini
Bruno Frediani
Carlomaurizio Montecucco
Francesco Ciccia
Paola Cipriani
Marco Gattorno
Roberto Giacomelli
Angelo Ravelli
Ruscitti, Piero
Natoli, Valentina
Consolaro, Alessandro
Caorsi, Roberta
Rosina, Silvia
Giancane, Gabriella
Naddei, Roberta
Di Cola, Ilenia
Di Muzio, Claudia
Berardicurti, Onorina
Iacono, Daniela
Pantano, Ilenia
Rozza, Gelsomina
Rossi, Silvia
De Stefano, Ludovico
Balduzzi, Silvia
Vitale, Antonio
Caso, Francesco
Costa, Luisa
Prete, Marcella
Navarini, Luca
Iagnocco, Annamaria
Atzeni, Fabiola
Guggino, Giuliana
Perosa, Federico
Cantarini, Luca
Frediani, Bruno
Montecucco, Carlomaurizio
Ciccia, Francesco
Cipriani, Paola
Gattorno, Marco
Giacomelli, Roberto
Ravelli, Angelo
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective To compare clinical features and treatments of patients with systemic JIA (sIJA) and adult-onset Still’s disease (AOSD). Methods The clinical charts of consecutive patients with sJIA by International League of Association of Rheumatology criteria or AOSD by Yamaguchi criteria were reviewed. Patients were seen at a large paediatric rheumatology referral centre or at 10 adult rheumatology academic centres. Data collected included clinical manifestations, inflammation biomarkers, systemic score, macrophage activation syndrome (MAS), parenchymal lung disease, disease course, disability, death and medications administered. Results A total of 166 patients (median age at diagnosis 5 years) with sJIA and 194 patients with AOSD (median age at diagnosis 41 years) were included. The frequency of fever, rash, arthralgia, abdominal pain, MAS, parenchymal lung disease and increased acute phase reactants and ferritin were comparable between the two cohorts. Patients with sJIA had a higher prevalence of arthritis, whereas patients with AOSD had experienced leucocytosis and extra-articular organ involvement more frequently. Patients with AOSD were given more commonly low-dose corticosteroids, whereas biologic DMARDs were administered first-line more frequently in patients with sJIA. Conclusion We found remarkable disparities in the prevalence of clinical manifestations between the two illnesses, which may partly depend on their classification by different criteria.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10d23a97a6612dfe8978b9bdde0a9a82