McMahan Robert, Balfe Lisa M, Greene Laurence
1300 Amerigroup Way, Amerigroup Corporation Virginia Beach, VA 23464, USA.
J Manag Care Pharm. 2012 Jan-Feb;18(1 Suppl B):1-16. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2012.18.S1-B.1.
A systematic review on the comparative effectiveness of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) used to treat children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) was published by the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (AHRQ) in September 2011. Studies from 198 articles included in the review addressed the benefits and harms of DMARDs compared with conventional treatments and other DMARDs used to treat JIA. The review also incorporated studies comparing various clinical tools used for diagnosing JIA and measuring disease activity. Clinical outcome measures were analyzed to determine the most effective methods to measure disease state. The lack of current research for the treatment of JIA motivated AHRQ to contract with researchers to synthesize the available information with the intent of enabling health professionals to make evidence-based practice decisions for their patients. The review alsohighlights gaps in the research and areas that need to be addressed in the future.
To (a) educate health care practitioners on the findings from AHRQ's 2011 comparative effectiveness review on DMARDs used to treat children with JIA, (b) apply review findings to make diagnosis and treatment decisions in clinical practice, and (c) recognize limitations and gaps n the current research relating to the comparative benefits and harms of DMARDs for treatment of JIA.
JIA is a chronic inflammatory disease affecting approximately 300,000 children and adolescents in the United States.1 Initially manifesting with inflammation, swelling, pain, and stiffness of the joints, the disease as no apparent or known cause. JIA is a clinical diagnosis based on several actors including the number of affected joints and the involvement of other tissues (e.g., the skin and lymphoid tissues), and JIA has 7 categories: systemic-onset arthritis, oligoarthritis, rheumatoid-factor positive polyarthritis, rheumatoid-factor negative polyarthritis, enthesitis-related arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and undifferentiated arthritis.2 Complete remission and resolution of disease activity are the ultimate treatment goals; however, there is no present cure. Inhibition of inflammation, prevention of joint damage, and promotion of a high level of functioning are the immediate goals of treatment. Even with treatment, patients with JIA continue to experience disease activity, joint destruction, suboptimal function, and impaired quality of life, all of which extend into adulthood.3 JIA can be severely debilitating and places a heavy physical and psychological burden on children and families affected by the disease. Methotrexate is a nonbiologic DMARD with an unknown mechanism of action. Methotrexate has been used for so long in the treatment of JIA that it is frequently considered a part of conventional treatment; the evidence shows that methotrexate is superior to conventional treatment with NSAIDsand/or intra-articular corticosteroids. The introduction of newer biologic DMARDs has spawned optimism that treatment will increasingly lead to improved outcomes for JIA, but the evidence is insufficient to support superiority over methotrexate. There is moderate evidence to support the claim that continued treatment from 4 months to 2 years with a biologic DMARD in children who have responded to a biologic DMARD decreases the risk of a flare. However, the safety of biologic DMARDs for long-term use has not been determined and may be associated with the developmentof cancer. The association between tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha inhibitors and potential increased risk of lymphoma caused the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to place boxed warning labels on biologic DMARDs including etancercept, infliximab, and adalimumab. The effectiveness of the DMARDs appears to vary among categories of JIA and the treatment history of individual patients. Except for methotrexate, there is insufficient evidence to support selection of a specific drug or drug class over another in the treatment of JIA. The AHRQ review examines the scientific literature on DMARDs used in children with JIA in an effort to synthesize what is known about the subject, and the comprehensive review identifies important research gaps in the literature that need to be addressed. Only 8 studies (in 9 publications) were rated "good quality" by the AHRQ investigators.
医疗保健研究与质量局(AHRQ)于2011年9月发表了一项关于用于治疗幼年特发性关节炎(JIA)患儿的改善病情抗风湿药(DMARDs)比较疗效的系统评价。该评价纳入的198篇文章中的研究探讨了DMARDs与传统治疗方法及用于治疗JIA的其他DMARDs相比的益处和危害。该评价还纳入了比较用于诊断JIA和测量疾病活动度的各种临床工具的研究。对临床结局指标进行了分析,以确定测量疾病状态的最有效方法。由于目前缺乏关于JIA治疗的研究,AHRQ委托研究人员综合现有信息,以使卫生专业人员能够为其患者做出基于证据的实践决策。该评价还突出了研究中的差距以及未来需要解决的领域。
(a)让医疗保健从业者了解AHRQ 2011年关于用于治疗JIA患儿的DMARDs比较疗效评价的结果;(b)将评价结果应用于临床实践中的诊断和治疗决策;(c)认识到当前关于DMARDs治疗JIA的比较益处和危害研究中的局限性和差距。
JIA是一种慢性炎症性疾病,在美国约影响30万名儿童和青少年。1该疾病最初表现为关节的炎症、肿胀、疼痛和僵硬,病因不明。JIA是一种基于包括受累关节数量和其他组织(如皮肤和淋巴组织)受累情况等多个因素的临床诊断,JIA有7个类别:全身型关节炎、少关节炎、类风湿因子阳性多关节炎、类风湿因子阴性多关节炎、附着点炎相关关节炎、银屑病关节炎和未分化关节炎。2疾病活动的完全缓解和消退是最终治疗目标;然而,目前尚无治愈方法。抑制炎症、预防关节损伤和促进高水平功能是治疗的直接目标。即使经过治疗,JIA患者仍会经历疾病活动、关节破坏、功能欠佳和生活质量受损,所有这些都会持续到成年期。3 JIA可能会严重致残,给受该疾病影响的儿童及其家庭带来沉重的身心负担。甲氨蝶呤是一种作用机制不明的非生物DMARD。甲氨蝶呤在JIA治疗中使用已久,常被视为传统治疗的一部分;证据表明,甲氨蝶呤优于使用非甾体抗炎药和/或关节内注射皮质类固醇的传统治疗。新型生物DMARDs的引入带来了乐观情绪,认为治疗将越来越多地改善JIA的结局,但证据不足以支持其优于甲氨蝶呤。有中等证据支持在对生物DMARDs有反应的儿童中持续使用生物DMARDs 4个月至2年可降低病情复发风险的说法。然而,生物DMARDs长期使用的安全性尚未确定,可能与癌症的发生有关。肿瘤坏死因子(TNF)α抑制剂与淋巴瘤潜在风险增加之间的关联导致美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)在包括依那西普、英夫利昔单抗和阿达木单抗在内的生物DMARDs上贴上了黑框警告标签。DMARDs的疗效似乎因JIA的类别和个体患者的治疗史而异。除甲氨蝶呤外,没有足够的证据支持在JIA治疗中选择一种特定药物或药物类别优于另一种。AHRQ的评价审查了关于用于JIA患儿的DMARDs的科学文献,以综合关于该主题的已知信息,全面评价确定了文献中需要解决的重要研究差距。AHRQ的研究人员仅将8项研究(9篇出版物)评为“高质量”。