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Tocilizumab modifies clinical and laboratory features of macrophage activation syndrome complicating systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Authors :
Mariko Mohri
Masaaki Mori
Yasuo Nakagishi
Hiroyuki Wakiguchi
Hiroaki Umebayashi
Takahiro Yasumi
Noriko Kinjo
Mao Mizuta
Yuka Okura
Tomohiro Kubota
Nami Okamoto
Masaki Shimizu
Junko Yasumura
Naomi Iwata
Kenichi Nishimura
Masato Yashiro
Source :
Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal, Pediatric Rheumatology Online Journal, Vol 18, Iss 1, Pp 1-7 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Background This study aimed to determine the influence of tocilizumab (TCZ) in modifying the clinical and laboratory features of macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) complicating systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (s-JIA). Furthermore, we assessed the performance of the 2016 MAS classification criteria for patients with s-JIA-associated MAS while treated with TCZ. Methods A panel of 15 pediatric rheumatologists conducted a combination of expert consensus and analysis of real patient data. Clinical and laboratory features of s-JIA-associated MAS in 12 TCZ-treated patients and 18 untreated patients were evaluated. Possible MAS was defined as having characteristic laboratory features but lack of clinical features of MAS, or atypical MAS, or early treatment that prevented full-blown MAS. Results Clinically, the TCZ-treated patients with s-JIA-associated MAS were less likely febrile and had significantly lower ferritin, triglyceride, and CRP levels than the untreated patients with s-JIA-associated MAS. Other laboratory features of MAS including lower platelet counts and lower fibrinogen were more pronounced in TCZ-treated patients. The TCZ-treated patients with s-JIA-associated MAS were less likely to be classified as MAS based on the MAS classification criteria (25% vs 83.3%, p Conclusion TCZ could modify the clinical and laboratory features of s-JIA-associated MAS. When evaluating the s-JIA patients while treated with TCZ, it is not applicable to use MAS classification criteria. Care must be taken to not underdiagnose MAS based on the MAS classification criteria.

Details

ISSN :
15460096
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Rheumatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82ff9babc0e8ab65e7c94cc1adcfb6bd