Characteristics of patients with juvenile onset systemic sclerosis in an adult single-center cohort

54Citations
Citations of this article
25Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Objective. Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a rare connective tissue disease in childhood. We compared the characteristics of adult patients with juvenile-onset SSc (jSSc) from a single-center cohort to an adult-onset group. Methods. Patients with disease onset before the age of 17 years were included in the jSSc cohort, while subjects with SSc onset after age 17 formed the adult-onset cohort. Results. We identified 52 adult subjects with jSSc and compared them to 954 patients with adult-onset SSc. The mean ± SD age at disease onset of the patients with jSSc was 14 ± 2 years, 39 (75%) of them were women, and 24 (46%) had the diffuse cutaneous subset of SSc (dcSSc). There were no differences between the 2 cohorts in terms of sex and disease subset. Overlaps were significantly more frequent among the jSSc cohort (37%) compared to the adult-onset group (18%; p = 0.002). Autoantibody analysis demonstrated significantly more antitopoisomerase I antibody-positive subjects (33% vs 20%; p = 0.034) and significantly fewer anticentromere antibody-positive subjects (2% vs 25%; p < 0.001) in the jSSc cohort. Compared to the adult-onset group at 10 years from disease onset, survival was significantly higher among the subjects with jSSc (98% vs 75%; p = 0.001), pulmonary arterial hypertension had a significantly lower incidence (2% vs 14%; p = 0.032), and there was no difference in terms of pulmonary fibrosis (22% vs 21%) and cardiac scleroderma (3% vs 2%) between the 2 groups. Conclusion. The high survival rates and lower proportion of dcSSc in the adult jSSc cohort may represent a survival bias. The Journal of Rheumatology Copyright © 2010. All rights reserved.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Foeldvari, I., Nihtyanova, S. I., Wierk, A., & Denton, C. P. (2010). Characteristics of patients with juvenile onset systemic sclerosis in an adult single-center cohort. Journal of Rheumatology, 37(11), 2422–2426. https://doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.100001

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free