Understanding inflammation in juvenile idiopathic arthritis: How immune biomarkers guide clinical strategies in the systemic onset subtype

Publication date

2016-09

Authors

Swart, Joost FORCID 0000-0002-2759-2822ISNI 0000000390270524
de Roock, SytzeISNI 0000000391194594
Prakken, BerentISNI 0000000389886890

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

The translation of basic insight in immunological mechanisms underlying inflammation into clinical practice of inflammatory diseases is still challenging. Here we describe how - through continuous dialogue between bench and bedside - immunological knowledge translates into tangible clinical use in a complex inflammatory disease, juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Systemic JIA (sJIA) is an autoinflammatory disease, leading to the very successful use of IL-1 antagonists. Further immunological studies identified new immune markers for diagnosis, prediction of complications, response to and successful withdrawal of therapy. Myeloid Related Protein (MRP)-8, MRP-14, S100-A12 and Interleukin-18 are already used daily in clinic as markers for active sJIA. For non-sJIA subtypes, HLA-B27, antinuclear-antibodies, rheumatoid factor, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein are still used for classification, prognosis or active disease. MRP-8, MRP-14 and S100-A12 are now under study for clinical practice. We believe that with biomarkers, algorithms can soon be designed for the individual risk of disease, complications, damage, prediction of response to, and successful withdrawal of therapy. In that way, less time will be lost and less pain will be suffered by the patients. In this review we describe the current status of immunological biomarkers used in diagnosis and treatment of JIA.

Keywords

Biomarkers, Classification, Juvenile arthritis, Prognosis, Recurrence, Taverne, Journal Article, Review

Citation

Swart, JF, de Roock, S & Prakken, B J 2016, 'Understanding inflammation in juvenile idiopathic arthritis : How immune biomarkers guide clinical strategies in the systemic onset subtype', European Journal of Immunology, vol. 46, no. 9, pp. 2068–2077. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201546092