Guest guest Posted March 27, 2008 Report Share Posted March 27, 2008 Anakinra may curb Still's disease and juvenile arthritis Ann Rheum Dis 2008;67:302-308. www.therapeuticsdaily.com/news/article.cfm?contentValue=1755956 & contentType=sent\ ryarticle & channelID=29 Reuters Health - Mar. 26, 2008 By NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Patients with systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) or adult-onset Still's disease who are resistant to conventional treatment, may benefit from therapy with the interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor antagonist anakinra, French researchers report in the March issue of the ls of the Rheumatic Diseases. Dr. Pierre Quartier told Reuters Health that " anti-IL-1 treatment is worth considering as a first line anti-cytokine treatment ... in patients with an active, corticosteroid-dependent disease. Controlled trials are needed, however, both to assess efficacy and safety. We need to better understand why some patients are good responders and others not. " Dr. Quartier of Hopital Necker-Enfants Malades, Paris and colleagues studied 20 patients (mean age, 12.4 years) who had had JIA for a mean of 7.0 years and 15 (mean age, 38.1 years) who had had Still's disease for a mean of 7.8 years. Children were treated with 1-2 mg/kg/day of anakinra and adults were given 100 mg/day. The investigators note that although most Still's patients responded, less than half of the JIA patients achieved a marked and sustained improvement. Specifically, five of the patients with JIA (25%) had a 50% improvement by ACR criteria at 6 months. Steroid use was reduced by 15% to 78% from baseline in 10 of the JIA patients. However, 11 (73%) of the Still's disease patients had " a prompt and dramatic improvement in all disease markers. " At a mean follow-up of 17.5 months, two of these patients had stopped corticosteroids and eight had reduced steroid use by as much as 95%. The team concludes that one issue to be addressed " is whether the anakinra dose or the number of injections per day should have been increased in patients that did not respond. " Little is known, they add, " about the pharmacokinetics of anakinra in children. " The author of an accompanying editorial, Dr. Woo of University College, London, told Reuters Health that " this study confirms that blocking the action of IL-1 works well in only a proportion of systemic-onset JIA patients, and the available evidence suggests there are different disease mechanisms that produce the clinical picture of systemic-onset JIA. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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