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Anakinra as first-line disease-modifying therapy in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis: report of forty-six patients from an international multicenter series

Authors :
Ginger Janow
Norman T. Ilowite
Manuela Pardeo
Femke H. M. Prince
Marion A J van Rossum
Peter A. Nigrovic
Andrew Zeft
Melissa L. Mannion
Mary Beth F. Son
Karla N. Jones
Randy Q. Cron
Sandy D. Hong
Andrew I. Shulman
C. Egla Rabinovich
James Birmingham
Elisabetta Cortis
Gloria C. Higgins
Paivi Miettunen
Aaron Eggebeen
Erin Janssen
AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Paediatric Infectious Diseases / Rheumatology / Immunology
Source :
Arthritis and rheumatism, 63(2), 545-555. John Wiley and Sons Inc.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

To examine the safety and efficacy of the interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor antagonist anakinra as first-line therapy for systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Patients with systemic JIA receiving anakinra as part of initial disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) therapy were identified from 11 centers in 4 countries. Medical records were abstracted using a standardized instrument, and resulting data were analyzed to characterize concomitant therapies, clinical course, adverse events, and predictors of outcome. Among 46 patients meeting inclusion criteria, anakinra monotherapy was used in 10 patients (22%), while 67% received corticosteroids and 33% received additional DMARDs. Outcomes were evaluated at a median followup interval of 14.5 months. Fever and rash resolved within 1 month in >95% of patients, while C-reactive protein and ferritin normalized within this interval in >80% of patients. Active arthritis persisted at 1 month in 39% of patients, at 3 months in 27%, and at >6 months of followup in 11%. Approximately 60% of patients, including 8 of 10 receiving anakinra monotherapy, attained a complete response without escalation of therapy. Disease characteristics and treatment were similar in partial and complete responders, except that partial responders were markedly younger at onset (median age 5.2 years versus 10.2 years; P = 0.004). Associated adverse events included documented bacterial infection in 2 patients and hepatitis in 1 patient. Tachyphylaxis was not observed. Anakinra as first-line therapy for systemic JIA was associated with rapid resolution of systemic symptoms and prevention of refractory arthritis in almost 90% of patients during the interval examined. These results justify further study of IL-1 inhibition as first-line, rather than rescue, therapy in systemic JIA

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00043591
Volume :
63
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arthritis and rheumatism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f7750e274aa2202b3a60c7c00adf046b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/art.30128