Early outcomes and improvement of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis enrolled in a Canadian multicenter inception cohort

Kiem Oen(University of Manitoba), Ciarán M. Duffy(Montreal Children's Hospital), Shirley M. L. Tse(University of Toronto), Suzanne Ramsey(Dalhousie University), Janet Ellsworth(University of Alberta), Gaëlle Chédeville(Montreal Children's Hospital), Anne-Laure Chetaille(Université Laval), Claire Saint‐Cyr(Université de Montréal), David A. Cabral(University of British Columbia), Lynn Spiegel(University of Toronto), Rayfel Schneider(University of Toronto), Bianca Lang(Dalhousie University), Adam M. Huber(Dalhousie University), Paul Dancey(St. John's University), Earl D. Silverman(University of Toronto), Alan Rosenberg(University of Saskatchewan), Bonnie Cameron(University of Toronto), Nicole Johnson(University of Calgary), Jean Dorval(Université Laval), Rosie Scuccimarri(Montreal Children's Hospital), Sarah Campillo(Montreal Children's Hospital), Ross E. Petty(University of British Columbia), Karen N. Watanabe Duffy(Montreal Children's Hospital), Gilles Boire(Université de Sherbrooke), Élie Haddad(Université de Montréal), Kristin Houghton(University of British Columbia), Ronald M. Laxer(University of Toronto), Stuart E. Turvey(University of British Columbia), Päivi Miettunen(University of Calgary), Katherine Gross(Penticton Regional Hospital), Jaime Guzmán(University of British Columbia), Susanne M. Benseler(University of Toronto), Brian M. Feldman(University of Toronto), V. Espinosa(University of British Columbia), Rae S. M. Yeung(University of Toronto), Lori B. Tucker(University of British Columbia)
Arthritis Care & Research
March 30, 2010
Cited by 107

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine early outcomes and early improvements in a prospective inception cohort of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) treated with current standard therapies. METHODS: Patients selected were enrolled in an inception cohort of JIA, the Research in Arthritis in Canadian Children Emphasizing Outcomes Study. The juvenile rheumatoid arthritis core criteria set measures were completed at enrollment and 6 months later. Frequencies of normal values for each of the core set measures and the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) Pediatric 30, 50, and 70 (Pedi 70) criteria response rates achieved at 6 months after enrollment were calculated for each JIA-onset subtype group. RESULTS: Among 354 patients in the study, the median interval between diagnosis and enrollment was 0.7 months. At 6 months after enrollment, median values of active joint counts were highest in patients with rheumatoid factor (RF)-positive polyarthritis (4) and RF-negative polyarthritis (2), but were 0 or 1 for other subtypes. Fifty percent or more of patients with oligoarthritis, systemic arthritis, enthesitis-related arthritis, and undifferentiated arthritis had no active joints, and the ACR Pedi 70 criteria response rate was 48% or more in those with oligoarthritis, RF-negative polyarthritis, and systemic arthritis. CONCLUSION: With current management strategies in clinical practice, improvement in disease activity was noted in considerable proportions of patients in all of the JIA subtype groups, but low levels of disease activity persisted in many. We expect that these early outcomes will prove to be significant predictors of long-term outcomes.


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