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Predicting unfavorable long-term outcome in juvenile idiopathic arthritis : results from the Nordic cohort study

Authors :
Rypdal, Veronika
Arnstad, Ellen Dalen
Aalto, Kristiina
Berntson, Lillemor
Ekelund, Maria
Fasth, Anders
Glerup, Mia
Herlin, Troels
Nielsen, Susan
Peltoniemi, Suvi
Zak, Marek
Rygg, Marite
Rypdal, Martin
Nordal, Ellen
Rypdal, Veronika
Arnstad, Ellen Dalen
Aalto, Kristiina
Berntson, Lillemor
Ekelund, Maria
Fasth, Anders
Glerup, Mia
Herlin, Troels
Nielsen, Susan
Peltoniemi, Suvi
Zak, Marek
Rygg, Marite
Rypdal, Martin
Nordal, Ellen
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: The aim was to develop prediction rules that may guide early treatment decisions based on baseline clinical predictors of long-term unfavorable outcome in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods: In the Nordic JIA cohort, we assessed baseline disease characteristics as predictors of the following outcomes 8 years after disease onset. Non-achievement of remission off medication according to the preliminary Wallace criteria, functional disability assessed by Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (CHAQ) and Physical Summary Score (PhS) of the Child Health Questionnaire, and articular damage assessed by the Juvenile Arthritis Damage Index-Articular (JADI-A). Multivariable models were constructed, and cross-validations were performed by repeated partitioning of the cohort into training sets for developing prediction models and validation sets to test predictive ability. Results: The total cohort constituted 423 children. Remission status was available in 410 children: 244 (59.5%) of these did not achieve remission off medication at the final study visit. Functional disability was present in 111/340 (32.7%) children assessed by CHAQ and 40/199 (20.1%) by PhS, and joint damage was found in 29/216 (13.4%). Model performance was acceptable for making predictions of long-term outcome. In validation sets, the area under the curves (AUCs) in the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were 0.78 (IQR 0.72-0.82) for non-achievement of remission off medication, 0.73 (IQR 0.67-0.76) for functional disability assessed by CHAQ, 0.74 (IQR 0.65-0.80) for functional disability assessed by PhS, and 0.73 (IQR 0.63-0.76) for joint damage using JADI-A. Conclusion: The feasibility of making long-term predictions of JIA outcome based on early clinical assessment is demonstrated. The prediction models have acceptable precision and require only readily available baseline variables. Further testing in other cohorts is warranted.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234218414
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186.s13075-018-1571-6