Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is an umbrella term for arthritis of unknown origin, lasting for >6 weeks with onset before 16 years of age. JIA is the most common chronic inflammatory rheumatic condition of childhood. According to the International League Against Rheumatism (ILAR) classification, seven mutually exclusive categories of JIA exist based on disease manifestations during the first 6 months of disease. Although the ILAR classification has been useful to foster research, it has been criticized mainly as it does not distinguish those forms of chronic arthritis observed in adults and in children from those that may be unique to childhood. Hence, efforts to provide a new evidence-based classification are ongoing. Similar to arthritis observed in adults, pathogenesis involves autoimmune and autoinflammatory mechanisms. The field has witnessed a remarkable improvement in therapeutic possibilities of JIA owing to the availability of new potent drugs and the possibility to perform controlled trials with support from legislative interventions and large networks availability. The goal of drug therapy in JIA is to rapidly reduce disease activity to inactive disease or clinical remission, minimize drug side effects and achieve a quality of life comparable to that of healthy peers. As JIA can influence all aspects of a child’s and their family’s life, researchers increasingly recognize improvement of health-related quality of life as a key treatment goal.

Martini, A., Lovell, D., Albani, S., Brunner, H., Hyrich, K., Thompson, S., et al. (2022). Juvenile idiopathic arthritis. NATURE REVIEWS. DISEASE PRIMERS, 8(1) [10.1038/s41572-021-00332-8].

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Ruperto N
2022

Abstract

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is an umbrella term for arthritis of unknown origin, lasting for >6 weeks with onset before 16 years of age. JIA is the most common chronic inflammatory rheumatic condition of childhood. According to the International League Against Rheumatism (ILAR) classification, seven mutually exclusive categories of JIA exist based on disease manifestations during the first 6 months of disease. Although the ILAR classification has been useful to foster research, it has been criticized mainly as it does not distinguish those forms of chronic arthritis observed in adults and in children from those that may be unique to childhood. Hence, efforts to provide a new evidence-based classification are ongoing. Similar to arthritis observed in adults, pathogenesis involves autoimmune and autoinflammatory mechanisms. The field has witnessed a remarkable improvement in therapeutic possibilities of JIA owing to the availability of new potent drugs and the possibility to perform controlled trials with support from legislative interventions and large networks availability. The goal of drug therapy in JIA is to rapidly reduce disease activity to inactive disease or clinical remission, minimize drug side effects and achieve a quality of life comparable to that of healthy peers. As JIA can influence all aspects of a child’s and their family’s life, researchers increasingly recognize improvement of health-related quality of life as a key treatment goal.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Adult; Arthritis, Juvenile; Child; Humans; Quality of Life
English
27-gen-2022
2022
8
1
5
reserved
Martini, A., Lovell, D., Albani, S., Brunner, H., Hyrich, K., Thompson, S., et al. (2022). Juvenile idiopathic arthritis. NATURE REVIEWS. DISEASE PRIMERS, 8(1) [10.1038/s41572-021-00332-8].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/523821
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