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Effectiveness and long-term retention of anti-tumour necrosis factor treatment in juvenile and adult patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Data from Reuma.pt

Ana F. Mourão, Maria J. Santos, José A. Melo Gomes, Fernando M. Martins, Sílvia C. Mendonça, Filipa Oliveira Ramos, Susana Fernandes, Manuel Salgado, Margarida Guedes, Sónia Carvalho, José A. Costa, Iva Brito, Cátia Duarte, Carolina Furtado, Ana Lopes, Ana Rodrigues, Graça Sequeira, Jaime Branco, João E. Fonseca, Helena Canhão

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objectives. Assess the effectiveness and safety of biologic therapy as well as predictors of response at 1 year of therapy, retention rate in biologic treatment and predictors of drug discontinuation in JIA patients in the Portuguese register of rheumatic diseases. Methods. We prospectively collected patient and disease characteristics from patients with JIA who started biological therapy. Adverse events were collected during the follow-up period. Predictors of response at 1 year and drug retention rates were assessed at 4 years of treatment for the first biologic agent. Results. A total of 812 JIA patients [65% females, mean age at JIA onset 6.9 years (s.d. 4.7)], 227 received biologic therapy; 205 patients (90.3%) were treated with an anti-TNF as the first biologic. All the parameters used to evaluate disease activity, namely number of active joints, ESR and Childhood HAQ/HAQ, decreased significantly at 6 months and 1 year of treatment. The mean reduction in Juvenile Disease Activity Score 10 (JADAS10) after 1 year of treatment was 10.4 (s.d. 7.4). According to the definition of improvement using the JADAS10 score, 83.3% respond to biologic therapy after 1 year. Fourteen patients discontinued biologic therapies due to adverse events. Retention rates were 92.9% at 1 year, 85.5% at 2 years, 78.4% at 3 years and 68.1% at 4 years of treatment. Among all JIA subtypes, only concomitant therapy with corticosteroids was found to be univariately associated with withdrawal of biologic treatment (P = 0.016). Conclusion. Biologic therapies seem effective and safe in patients with JIA. In addition, the retention rates for the first biologic agent are high throughout 4 years.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberkev398
Pages (from-to)697-703
Number of pages7
JournalRheumatology (United Kingdom)
Volume55
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2016

Keywords

  • Biological treatment
  • Efficacy
  • Juvenile idiopathic arthritis
  • Safety

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