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Juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Old disease, new tactics

The Journal of Family Practice. 2019 March;68(2):E8-E13
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Beyond NSAIDs and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs are now biologic agents and anti-interleukin drugs that can augment therapy.

PRACTICE RECOMMENDATIONS

› Pair the findings of your clinical exam with the results of imaging and laboratory testing to make the diagnosis of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), as it is a diagnosis of exclusion. B

› Individualize treatment based on where the patient falls in the JIA disease spectrum to increase the likelihood that medical therapy will be effective. A

› Consider treating diagnosed JIA with an available biologic agent, which can provide a long asymptomatic period. B

Strength of recommendation (SOR)

A Good-quality patient-oriented evidence
B Inconsistent or limited-quality patient-oriented evidence
C Consensus, usual practice, opinion, disease-oriented evidence, case series

Macrophage-activating syndrome increases risk of morbidity, mortality

An overactivation and expansion of T lymphocytes and macrophagic histiocytes with hemophagocytic activity, macrophage-activating syndrome (MAS) occurs in approximately 10% of JIA patients,27 increasing their risk of morbidity and mortality. The syndrome, which typically presents as fever, seizures, hypotension, purpura, hepatitis, splenomegaly, and occasionally, multisystem organ failure, is seen in 30% to 40% of sJIA patients; approximately 11% of them experience sudden death as a consequence.28

The clinical setting of MAS includes presenting symptoms of fever and a salmon-pink macular rash (FIGURE). For many sJIA patients with MAS, the diagnosis is made when laboratory results show hyperferritinemia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, leukopenia, coagulopathy, and elevated levels of C-reactive protein and D-dimer.27

Macular rash of macrophage-activating syndrome in a systemic JIA patient

Different classes, different features

The following clinical profiles have been documented in different classes of JIA:

Systemic JIA presents with intermittent fever of at least 2 weeks’ duration, arthritis, and occasionally, a rash.

Extended oligo-articular JIA involves pain, in a mono-articular lower-extremity joint, that can develop suddenly or insidiously, and is characterized by early-morning stiffness and uveitis (especially in early-onset, antinuclear antibody-positive JIA patients).

Continue to: Poly-articular JIA