Prevalence of autoantibodies in patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Results from the German inception cohort ICON-JIA
Pediatric Rheumatology Feb 09, 2022
Findings could not corroborate a specific correlation between juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and other autoimmune phenomena. Interpretation is challenging due to the lack of well-matched control groups. Further data required to confirm the suspected elevated risk of developing other autoimmune phenomena in JIA patients.
In Germany, autoantibodies prevalence in JIA patients remains unknown.
This analysis involved 499 patients in the prospective, multicenter inception cohort of children newly diagnosed with JIA (ICON-JIA) from whom samples were analyzed for the presence of anti-thyroid antibodies, celiac disease-specific antibodies, and connective tissue disease-associated antibodies (CTD-screen).
Either clinically diagnosed autoimmune comorbidity or elevated autoantibodies was present in 76 (15.2%) patients.
Clinical autoimmune comorbidity was present in 21 patients; of these, only 8 also had serological positivity at the time of testing, while 55 had autoantibodies without clinical diagnosis.
Therefore, at least one elevated autoantibody was present in 63 patients (12.6%).
Of the overall samples analyzed, 3% showed presence of antibodies against thyroglobulin and 4% demonstrated the existence of antibodies against thyreoperoxidase.
TSH receptor antibodies could not be identified in any of the 499 cases.
Overall 0.4% of the patients had increased tissue transglutaminase antibodies.
There was a positive screen for CTD-specific antinuclear antibodies 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 corroborated.
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