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Emergent high fatality lung disease in systemic juvenile arthritis

Authors :
Jenny Lin
Michal Cidon
Richard K. Vehe
Seza Ozen
Aliva De
Christi J. Inman
Suhas M. Radhakrishna
Maria Ibarra
Fabrizio De Benedetti
Raymond R. Balise
Joy Mombourquette
James Birmingham
Maria de los Angeles Ceregido Perez
Ian Ferguson
Marisa Klein-Gitelman
Steven I. Goodman
Layla Bouzoubaa
Karen Onel
Assunta Ho
Khanh Lai
Kathleen A. Haines
Sara O. Vargas
Ann N. Leung
Dieneke Schonenberg-Meinema
Sampath Prahalad
Rayfel Schneider
R. Paul Guillerman
Gail H. Deutsch
Kevin W. Baszis
Alicia Casey
Deborah R. Liptzin
Lu Tian
Vivian E. Saper
Adam L Reinhardt
Grant S. Schulert
Diana Milojevic
Martha P. Fishman
Lauren A. Henderson
Purvesh Khatri
Johannes Roth
Edward M. Behrens
Mona Riskalla
Gill Bejerano
Jacqueline Yang
Clara Lin
Sivia K. Lapidus
Alexei A. Grom
Elizabeth D. Mellins
Matthew L. Stoll
Mark M. Davis
Randy Q. Cron
Karthik A. Jagadeesh
Khalid Abulaban
Khulood Khawaja
Natalie Rosenwasser
Kathryn Phillippi
Hafize Emine Sönmez
Ying Lu
Lisa R. Young
T Brent Graham
Rita Jerath
Daniel J. Kingsbury
Guangbo Chen
Melissa M. Hazen
Robin R. Deterding
Scott W. Canna
Christopher Towe
Johannes Birgmeier
Judith A. Smith
Susan Shenoi
Jianpeng Xu
Tushar J. Desai
Graduate School
Paediatric Infectious Diseases / Rheumatology / Immunology
AII - Inflammatory diseases
Source :
Annals of the rheumatic diseases. BMJ Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate the characteristics and risk factors of a novel parenchymal lung disease (LD), increasingly detected in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA).MethodsIn a multicentre retrospective study, 61 cases were investigated using physician-reported clinical information and centralised analyses of radiological, pathological and genetic data.ResultsLD was associated with distinctive features, including acute erythematous clubbing and a high frequency of anaphylactic reactions to the interleukin (IL)-6 inhibitor, tocilizumab. Serum ferritin elevation and/or significant lymphopaenia preceded LD detection. The most prevalent chest CT pattern was septal thickening, involving the periphery of multiple lobes ± ground-glass opacities. The predominant pathology (23 of 36) was pulmonary alveolar proteinosis and/or endogenous lipoid pneumonia (PAP/ELP), with atypical features including regional involvement and concomitant vascular changes. Apparent severe delayed drug hypersensitivity occurred in some cases. The 5-year survival was 42%. Whole exome sequencing (20 of 61) did not identify a novel monogenic defect or likely causal PAP-related or macrophage activation syndrome (MAS)-related mutations. Trisomy 21 and young sJIA onset increased LD risk. Exposure to IL-1 and IL-6 inhibitors (46 of 61) was associated with multiple LD features. By several indicators, severity of sJIA was comparable in drug-exposed subjects and published sJIA cohorts. MAS at sJIA onset was increased in the drug-exposed, but was not associated with LD features.ConclusionsA rare, life-threatening lung disease in sJIA is defined by a constellation of unusual clinical characteristics. The pathology, a PAP/ELP variant, suggests macrophage dysfunction. Inhibitor exposure may promote LD, independent of sJIA severity, in a small subset of treated patients. Treatment/prevention strategies are needed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00034967
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the rheumatic diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5ac43fa87d59f137b99a99f113d27098