Etanercept in Children with Polyarticular Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis

Daniel J. Lovell(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Edward H. Giannini(Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center), Andreas Reiff(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Gail Dunkel Cawkwell(Johns Hopkins University), Earl D. Silverman(Great Ormond Street Hospital), James J. Nocton(Medical College of Wisconsin), Leonard D. Stein(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Abraham Gedalia(Children's Hospital of New Orleans), Norman T. Ilowite(Schneider Children's Hospital), Carol A. Wallace(Seattle Children's Hospital), James B. Whitmore, Barbara K. Finck
New England Journal of Medicine
March 16, 2000
Cited by 1,252Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: We evaluated the safety and efficacy of etanercept, a soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor (p75):Fc fusion protein, in children with polyarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis who did not tolerate or had an inadequate response to methotrexate. METHODS: Patients 4 to 17 years old received 0.4 mg of etanercept per kilogram of body weight subcutaneously twice weekly for up to three months in the initial, open-label part of a multicenter trial. Those who responded to treatment then entered a double-blind study and were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or etanercept for four months or until a flare of the disease occurred. A response was defined as an improvement of 30 percent or more in at least three of six indicators of disease activity, with no more than one indicator worsening by more than 30 percent. RESULTS: At the end of the open-label study, 51 of the 69 patients (74 percent) had had responses to etanercept treatment. In the double-blind study, 21 of the 26 patients who received placebo (81 percent) withdrew because of disease flare, as compared with 7 of the 25 patients who received etanercept (28 percent) (P=0.003). The median time to disease flare with placebo was 28 days, as compared with more than 116 days with etanercept (P<0.001). In the double-blind study, there were no significant differences between the two treatment groups in the frequency of adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with etanercept leads to significant improvement in patients with active polyarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. Etanercept is well tolerated by pediatric patients.


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