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Abstract Number: 296

Declines In Levels Of Disease Activity and Physical Disability In Children With Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis Seen In Standard Clinical Care Over The Last 25 Years

Alessandro Consolaro1, Stefano Lanni1, Francesca Minoia1, Sergio Davì1, Sara Dalprà1, Benedetta Schiappapietra1, Rossana Pignataro1, Cristina Ferrari1, Alberto Martini1,2 and Angelo Ravelli3,4, 1Pediatria II, Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genova, Italy, 2Department of Pediatrics, University of Genova, Genova, Italy, 3PRINTO, Genoa, Italy, 4University of Genova, Genova, Italy

Meeting: 2013 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting

Keywords: Disease Activity and juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)

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Session Information

Title: Pediatric Rheumatology - Clinical and Therapeutic Aspects I: Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis

Session Type: Abstract Submissions (ACR)

Background/Purpose: Over the last 3 decades there have been important advances in the management of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), which include the introduction of methotrexate and, later on, the tendency toward its earlier initiation, the widespread use of intra-articular corticosteroid injections, and, more recently, the availability of the biologic response modifiers. Although this therapeutic progress is likely to have led to a marked improvement in the outlook of children with JIA, the prognostic impact of the newer therapeutic modalities is still poorly documented.

Methods:

The clinical information recorded during visits made in children with JIA from January 1987 to March 2012 was retrieved from the study center database. Visits were divided in the following time intervals: 1987-1995 (n=826), 1996-2000 (n=1,337), 2001-2005 (n=2,022), 2006-2012 (n=2,317). Measures of disease activity included the physician’s and parent’s global ratings (both made on a 0-10 cm visual analog scale, VAS), the parent’s pain rating (made on a 0-10 cm VAS) and the count of joints with swelling, pain on motion/tenderness and active disease. Measures of disability included the count of joints with restricted motion and a physical function tool (the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire, CHAQ before March 2007 and the Juvenile Arthritis Functionality Scale, JAFS after that date). To enable comparability of functional ability evaluations, both CHAQ and JAFS scores were converted to a 0-10 scale (0=best; 10=worst). Parent’s global and pain ratings as well as functional ability assessment were not available for visits made prior to 1995 because before this year these assessments were made on scales not comparable with those used afterwards. 

Results:

A total of 6,502 visits made in 1,079 patients were identified. The mean (SD) values of disease activity and physical disability measures  recorded in visits made at the various time intervals are presented in the table.

Physician

global

(0-10)

Active

joints

Restricted

joints

Parent

global

(0-10)

Parent

pain

(0-10)

Physical

function

(0-10)

1988-1996

5.4 (2.8)

8.2 (9.4)

8.0 (10.4)

–

–

–

1996-2000

5.0 (3.4)

5.7 (8.4)

5.5 (9.5)

2.8 (2.5)

2.5 (2.5)

1.7 (2.0)

2001-2005

4.0 (3.5)

3.8 (5.7)

3.1 (6.2)

2.4 (2.5)

2.4 (2.7)

1.3 (1.8)

2006-2012

2 (2.7)

2.2 (4.5)

1.9 (4.2)

2.1 (2.5)

1.9 (2.6)

0.4 (0.9)

Conclusion:

We observed a progressive decline in the levels of disease activity and physical disability over time among children with JIA seen from the mid of the 1980s to the 2010s. This finding confirms the notion that the recent advances in the management of JIA have led to a substantial improvement in disease outcome.


Disclosure:

A. Consolaro,
None;

S. Lanni,
None;

F. Minoia,
None;

S. Davì,
None;

S. Dalprà,
None;

B. Schiappapietra,
None;

R. Pignataro,
None;

C. Ferrari,
None;

A. Martini,
None;

A. Ravelli,
None.

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