Abstract
To assess the current International League of Associations for Rheumatology (ILAR) classification criteria (Edmonton, 2001) for juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) in Indian patients. Out of 441 children, 330 with chronic joint pains were diagnosed with juvenile onset chronic inflammatory arthritis and followed in an observational cohort. Our study was carried out from 1994 to 2006 in a community rheumatology clinic. Emphasis was placed on obtaining data required by the ILAR system. Of the original group, 235 children were eventually classified as having JIA; 108 were examined during the first year of illness. We assigned 224 children (95%) to discrete JIA categories: enthesitis-related arthritis (ERA; 36%), oligoarthritis (OLA-persistent; 17%), polyarthritis rheumatoid factor (RF)-negative (17%), polyarthritis RF-positive (12%), systemic arthritis (8%), OLA-extended (4%), and psoriatic arthritis (1%). The remaining 11 children (5%) were classified with undifferentiated arthritis (mostly an overlap due to seropositive RF and/or HLA-B27). The prevalence of ERA (89% HLA-B27-positive) and seropositive RF was unexpectedly high. Although agreement (kappa > 0.79) with the American College of Rheumatology criteria and the European Spondylarthropathy Study Group criteria was good to excellent, the ILAR system was found to be more comprehensive and clinically homogeneous. However, some problems appear unique in our scenario. A wide-spectrum phenotype of JIA is demonstrated by an Indian cohort. Although useful, RF and HLA-B27 in this population proved problematic to the ILAR classification.
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