Effect of Time to Start of Biologic Therapy on Treatment Response in Childhood Arthritis: Results From the UCAN CAN-DU Cohort

Publication date

2026-03

Authors

de Jonge, Jelleke B.
de Roock, SytzeISNI 0000000391194594
Schonenberg-Meinema, Dieneke
van den Berg, J. Merlijn
Marshall, Deborah A.
Vastert, Sebastiaan JISNI 000000039657238X
Yeung, Rae S.M.
Swart, Joost FORCID 0000-0002-2759-2822ISNI 0000000390270524
Benseler, Susanne M.
Huber, Adam

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Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

Objective: To estimate the effect of time from symptom onset to start of biologic treatment on achieving inactive arthritis within six months in a cohort of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Methods: The international UCAN CAN-DU study prospectively enrolled patients with JIA across Canada and the Netherlands. A nested cohort study was performed and biologic-naive patients with nonsystemic JIA were included at the start of biologic therapy. The primary outcome was inactive arthritis at six months. Demographics, disease-related parameters, and treatment response were compared using (non)parametric tests among early (time symptom onset to biologic start: 0–6 months), intermediate (7–12 months), and late (13–24 months) treatment groups. A logistic regression model analyzed the effect of time to biologic start on the response at six months, adjusting for active joint count and physician global assessment. A graphical representation of the model was created. Results: One hundred and thirty children with JIA were included (early: n = 35; intermediate: n = 46; late: n = 49), 66% were female, and the median age at symptom onset was 11.0 years. The proportion of patients that reach inactive arthritis in the early starters (83%) was significantly higher than in late starters (57%). For each month of delay to the start of biologic treatment, the adjusted odds of having active arthritis after six months of therapy was 1.09 (interquartile range: 1.02–1.17, P = 0.009). Conclusion: Early start of biologic therapies in patients with JIA was associated with a higher proportion of patients reaching inactive arthritis within six months, suggesting a window of opportunity to control disease activity.

Keywords

Immunology and Allergy, Rheumatology, Immunology, Journal Article

Citation

de Jonge, J B, de Roock, S, Schonenberg-Meinema, D, van den Berg, J M, Marshall, D A, Vastert, S J, Yeung, R S M, Swart, J F, Benseler, S M, Huber, A, Lang, B, DeCoste, C, Stringer, E, Ramsey, S, Rosenberg, A, Neufeld, K, Jariwala, M, Kerr, T, Mosoiu, A, Rachlis, A, Xu, A, Cheng, A, Jebb, B, Feldman, B, Pereira, B, Levy, D, Dissanayake, D, Limenis, E, Rozenblyum, E, Cheng, H, Lee, J J Y, Spiegel, L, Schneider, R, Laxer, R, Verstegen, R, Tse, S, Duong, T, Human, A, Cabral, D, Tam, H, Guzman, J, Morishita, K, van Royen-Kerkhof, A, Prakken, B, Van Nieuwenhove, E, Jansen, M, Wulffraat, N, Legger, E, Schatorje, E, Kip, M & the UCAN CAN-DU and UCAN CURE consortia 2026, 'Effect of Time to Start of Biologic Therapy on Treatment Response in Childhood Arthritis : Results From the UCAN CAN-DU Cohort', Arthritis & Rheumatology, vol. 78, no. 3, pp. 743-751. https://doi.org/10.1002/art.43401