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Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a serious autoimmune childhood disease that encompasses several types of chronic arthritis. It is the most common rheumatic disease in children and can cause significant short-term and long-term disability, including permanent joint damage. Management of JIA is based on a combination of pharmacologic interventions, physical and occupational therapy, and psychosocial support. Intra-articular steroid (IAS) injection, or injection of steroid medication into an arthritic joint, is a routine therapeutic procedure in clinical rheumatology. Most pediatric rheumatologists currently perform injections based on knowledge of anatomy and by feeling for anatomical landmarks, but results from adult studies on ultrasound (US)-guided technique have suggested a role for using US in treating and managing JIA. The overall goal of this project is to determine the feasibility of a multicenter study comparing US-guided IAS injection with the usual technique of using external anatomic features to improve arthritis symptoms in JIA. The key issues that this pilot project will determine will be: 1) the ability to use US to successfully image and detect abnormalities in the joints in children with JIA 2) image the injected medication in the joint space or its surroundings immediately after the injection 3) determine methods to measure the clinical response to injection 4) evaluate the feasibility of using saved US scans to localize injected medication in or around the joints and to determine abnormalities concerning for arthritis. These results will be used to establish the protocols necessary to design a multicenter study to determine the effect of US-guided IAS injection in the treatment of juvenile arthritis. Studies regarding the applicability and feasibility of musculoskeletal US in an outpatient pediatric rheumatology setting are important in order to establish the utility of this new technology in guiding diagnosis and therapy in JIA. Results from this study may have a significant impact on pediatric rheumatology and the way by which pediatric rheumatologists currently assess signs of arthritis and perform routine therapeutic procedures.
Full description
AIM 1: The first aim will be a two-part cross-sectional study comparing US imaging of active joints in 55 subjects with JIA to standardized clinical and functional measures, assuming that each subject will have at least 1 active joint. Subjects less than 21 years diagnosed with JIA per classification described by the International League Against Rheumatism (ILAR) with large and medium joint synovitis will be eligible.
AIM 2: The second aim will study the use of US in imaging the placement of IAS and response to this therapy in 20 subjects receiving IAS for treatment of active arthritis in large and medium joints. Patients less than 21 years old with a diagnosis of JIA per ILAR classification receiving IAS injections of the knee, wrist, elbow, or ankle as part of their standard medical care will be eligible. Non-eligible patients include subjects with a non-inflammatory diagnosis, such as mechanical joint disease, or a large joint effusion requiring additional therapeutic procedures, such as arthrocentesis. Informed consent and assent for children over 7 will be obtained. The targeted joint will be scored by a rheumatologist other than the PI using the Clinical Severity Score described above. Sedation may be provided per routine for joint injection. Routine process for joint injection will be followed. The pediatric rheumatologist performing the injection will use standard external clinical landmarks and palpation to identify the appropriate injection site. Triamcinolone hexacetonide with 1% unbuffered lidocaine will then be shaken to allow the introduction of air per GAS-graphy technique as described by Koski et al. and injected into the targeted joint. The PI, who will not perform any injections in this study, will obtain US imaging just prior and immediately following the joint injection. The rheumatologist performing the injection will be masked to US images. Each image will be obtained and recorded using EULAR specifications, saved under a subject code on the US machine hard drive, and scored by the PI and the consulting rheumatologist using the US Severity Score described above. For the second aim, I will also determine the presence or absence of steroid within the target joint capsule. The physician performing the physical exam, the subject, and the subject's guardian(s) will be masked regarding US results, including location of steroid within or around the joint space and sonographic recordings of joint pathology. Patient outcomes will be determined at 1 week, 4-6 weeks and 3-6 months by the Clinical Severity Score and by US using the US Severity Score described and developed in Aim 1. The clinician performing the physical exam and the sonographer will be masked to each other's scores.
Other variables will also be collected as part of both aims, including pain as assessed by a standardized pain scale, physician assessment of global disease activity, and functional status as determined by the childhood health assessment questionnaire (CHAQ), a validated, reliable measure of functional status in JIA. These last assessments are 3 of the 6 measures of the ACR Pediatric 30, a validated measure used in clinical trials in JIA (Giannini et al., 1997). Other patient data that will be collected include JIA subtype, duration of disease, age of onset, age at procedure, race/ethnicity, concurrent medications, and whether the procedure required the use of general anesthesia.
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Inclusion Criteria:The first aim will be a two-part cross-sectional study comparing US imaging of active joints in 55 subjects with JIA to standardized clinical and functional measures, assuming that each subject will have at least 1 active joint. All subjects must meet the following criteria
The second aim will study the use of US in imaging the placement of IAS and response to this therapy in 20 subjects receiving IAS for treatment of active arthritis in large and medium joints. Subjects must meet the following criteria:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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