Abstract

BackgroundAn association of different autoimmune diseases is suspected. In juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), only few and partially conflicting data on the co-existence of other autoimmune disorders are available. The prevalence of autoantibodies in patients with JIA in Germany is not known.MethodsSamples from 499 patients (median age at time of blood collection 11 years, median disease duration 4.4 years) in the prospective, multicenter inception cohort of children newly diagnosed with JIA (ICON-JIA) were analysed for the presence of anti-thyroid antibodies, celiac disease-specific antibodies (anti-tTG IgA, anti-tTG IgG), and connective tissue disease-associated antibodies (CTD-screen).ResultsA total of 76 (15.2%) patients had either clinically diagnosed autoimmune comorbidity or elevated autoantibodies. Of 21 patients with clinical autoimmune comorbidity, only 8 were also serologically positive at the time of testing, while 55 patients had autoantibodies without clinical diagnosis. Thus, 63 patients (12.6%) had at least one elevated autoantibody. Antibodies against thyroglobulin were found in 3% and against thyreoperoxidase in 4% of the samples. TSH receptor antibodies could not be detected in any of the 499 patients. Tissue transglutaminase antibodies were elevated in 0.4% of the patients. A positive screen for CTD-specific antinuclear antibodies was found in 7%, but only rarely specific antibodies (anti-dsDNA 1.4%, anti-SS-A and -SS-B 0.2% each, anti-CENP-B 0.4%) were confirmed.ConclusionsIn our study, a specific correlation between JIA and other autoimmune phenomena could not be confirmed. The lack of well-matched control groups makes interpretation challenging. Further data need to corroborate the suspected increased risk of developing other autoimmune phenomena in JIA patients.

Highlights

  • An association of different autoimmune diseases is suspected

  • Data from a single-center analysis in Italy with 79 patients showed that 15.2% of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) patients had at least one autoimmune disease in addition to JIA

  • A large cross-sectional study using two United States administrative healthcare claims databases compared the prevalence of multiple autoimmune diseases of more than 29,000 JIA patients with that of more than 134,000 matched children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An association of different autoimmune diseases is suspected. In juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), only few and partially conflicting data on the co-existence of other autoimmune disorders are available. Individual studies come to different results regarding the prevalence of autoimmune diseases in JIA patients, so that screening examinations are not routinely carried out. This can partly be explained by the fact that autoimmune diseases are initially asymptomatic. Another study (n = 151) reported a 7-fold increased risk for celiac disease and a high prevalence of autoimmune thyroiditis (11.9%) together with a high rate of subclinical hypothyroidism (9.3%) in JIA [5]. A large cross-sectional study using two United States administrative healthcare claims databases compared the prevalence of multiple autoimmune diseases of more than 29,000 JIA patients with that of more than 134,000 matched children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). A German study showed, that type 1 diabetes is significantly more frequent in patients with JIA [9]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call