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Therapy of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. New drug therapy Rik Joos, M.D. Centre for Paediatric Rheumatology University hospital, Gent, Belgium.

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Presentation on theme: "Therapy of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. New drug therapy Rik Joos, M.D. Centre for Paediatric Rheumatology University hospital, Gent, Belgium."— Presentation transcript:

1 Therapy of children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. New drug therapy Rik Joos, M.D. Centre for Paediatric Rheumatology University hospital, Gent, Belgium

2 JIA – JCA – JRA??? What’s in a name?

3 J C A – J R A – J I A Systemic Onset Arthritis High spiking fever Fugitive rash Adenopathy Hepatosplenomegaly Serositis No specific age at onset Boys = Girls

4 J C A – J R A – J I A Polyarticular Onset Age at onset: 3-6 and 10 – 14 years Girls > or = Boys Symmetrical polyarthritis Rapid ankylosis (wrists, neck, feet) Systemic symptoms are possible

5 J C A – EOPA J R A - OLIGO J I A – OLIGO Age at onset 2 - 4 years Girls >>> Boys Arthritis of one or both knees Chronic posterior uveitis (30 %) ANA positive (> 80 %)

6 J C A- LOPA J A S J I A – E R A Age at onset: 10 - 15 years Boys >> Girls Asymmetrical oligoarthritis (lower limbs) Enthesitis Acute anterior uveitis (33 %) Association with HLA B27 (>85 %)

7 What are the goals of therapy in rheumatic diseases? Ultimate goal If cure is not achievable If control is not achievable In all circumstances Cure Control Comfort of the patient Maintain function

8 Does the therapy depend on the type of rheumatism?? And by consequence is it important to put a thorough diagnosis? No, to a certain point Yes, beyond that point

9 What is the general therapeutic approach? MedicalNon medical

10 Medical treatment 1. general treatment 2. local treatment a. eyes b. joints

11 General medical treatment 1. anti – inflammatory 2. immunomodulatory short term/ rapid effect/ short action/ short effect after stop long term/ slower effect/ long action/ long effect after stop

12 Anti-inflammatory treatment non steroidal aspirin “classic” NSAID’s selective cox 2 inhibitors (coxib’s) steroids

13 Aspirin first non steroidal anti – inflammatory drug high dose needed 50 – 100 mg/kg/day short action 4 –6 times per day dosage side effects! Salicylism Bleeding disorders GI side effects in low dose: anti sludge – anti thrombotic

14 “classic” NSAID’s i.e. Naproxen, Ibuprofen, Diclofenac, Indomethacin, Piroxicam,... 1. Indications: symptomatic treatment of inflammation of joints fever of systemic origin pain treatment 2. way of administration oral Rectal IM

15 “classic” NSAID’s 1. side effects a. Dyspepsia b. GI ulcer – bleeding c. Fluid retention a. Edema b. Hypertension c. Renal insufficiency d. Allergy e. Bleeding disorder 2. relatively cheep and widely available

16 Selective cox 2 inhibitors mechanism of cox 2 inhibition

17 Mechanism of action of NSAIDs Membrane phospholipids Arachidonic acid NSAIDs Gastroprotective prostaglandins Proinflammatory prostaglandins COX-1 (constitutive) Pennisi E, Science 280:1191 – 1192, 1998 Spangler RS, Semin Arthritis Rheum 26:435 – 446, 1996 COX-2* (inducible) COX-2 selective inhibitor Stomach Intestine Kidney Platelet Macrophages Synoviocytes *COX-2 constitutively present

18 Coxib 1. impact on side effects the same as “classic” NSAID’s except GI ulcer – bleeding Bleeding disorder 2. impact on effect depending on “strength” of anti- inflammatory effect

19 Coxib 1. indications in children the same as for “classic” NSAID’s but no proven efficacy no proven safety no approval yet 2. expensive and not widely available yet

20 Immunomodulatory treatment Disease modifying antirheumatic drugs = DMARD Slow acting antirheumatic drugs = SAARD Mode of action a. Aim to alter the immune reaction b. By that reduce the chronic aggression towards the joint c. By that preserve the joint structure and function d. By that preserve the quality of life

21 DMARD What treatments? a. Older treatments b. Actual “ traditional” treatments c. Biologicals d. Experimental treatments

22 What treatments? 1. older treatments (not used anymore, but still exceptionally....) a. gold salts b. levamisole c. d-penicillamin 2. “traditional” DMARD’s a. Methotrexate b. Sulphasalazine c. Hydroxychloroquine d. Leflunomide

23 Methotrexate a. “gold standard” b. mostly indicated in polyarticular disease c. low dose (5 mg/m²/week) versus medium ( 10 mg/m²/week) and high dose (20 mg/m²/week) d. Oral versus IM or SC

24 Methotrexate e. side effects a. Leukopenia b. liver function tests c. rare side effects (lung, bone,...) f. monitoring a. blood sampling every two weeks, than every four weeks, than every eight weeks b. no liver biopsy needed!

25 Sulphasalzine Efficacy proven – Oral – 30-50 mg/kg/day Indicated merely in oligoarticular patients and spondyloarthropathies Side effects Blood cell count Liver function tests Allergy Rare side effects (hair loss, reduced male fertility,...) Monitoring Blood sampling every month forst three months, later every three months

26 Hydroxychloroquine a. More seldom use in JIA – Oral – 6mg/kg/day b. Indicated in SLE and related auto-immune diseases such as Sjögren syndrome c. Side effects a. Blood cell count b. Retinopathy d. Monitoring a. Blood sampling every six weeks - two months b. Eye control 2/year

27 Leflunomide a. Recently developed in adults b. Some sparse trials in children with good results c. No approval d. Only trials in polyarticular JIA

28 Biologicals Approved Advanced trial development Experimental Etanercept – Enbrel Infliximab – Remicade Adalimumab – Humira CTLA4 Monoclonal antibodies

29 Treatment with ENBREL in polyarticular-course JRA Dose: ENBREL 0.4 mg/kg/dose SC 2X/week (maximum 25 mg/dose) Part 1 Open-label Months 1–3 Responders randomized ENBREL (n = 69) Placebo (n = 26) ENBREL (n = 25) Part 2 Double-blind Months 4–7 All patients ENBREL (n = 58) Open-label extension Months 8–21 Lovell DJ, Giannini EH, ACR, 1999

30 Patients achieving JRA definition of improvement after randomization *P < 0.01 ENBREL (n = 25) Placebo (n = 26) Lovell DJ et al, N Engl J Med 342:763–769, 2000

31 Summary With more than 1 year of continuous treatment with ENBREL in patients with JRA Benefits of ENBREL continue to be maintained 50/58 (86%) remain on treatment 70% demonstrate a 50% improvement in JRA Core Set Criteria Generally well tolerated with prolonged use No significant increase in adverse events over time Lovell DJ, Giannini EH, ACR, 1999

32 Biologicals Approved Advanced trial development Experimental Etanercept – Enbrel Infliximab – Remicade Adalimumab – Humira CTLA4 Monoclonal antibodies

33 Biologicals - monitoring Prevention: Screening for tuberculosis Prevent contact with (some) virusses Use more often antibiotics Side effects? Possible allergy Possible (pseudo) asthmatic reaction (remicade) More infectious episodes Long term side effects???? Tumor????


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