Clinical Phenotypes of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: New Insights from Pathophysiology and Literature Findings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Common and Rare Clinical Manifestations
3. Evolution Courses
3.1. Classification Based on the Evolution Temporality
3.2. Classification Based on the Type of Symptoms
3.3. Pathogenic Consideration and Expected Therapeutic Outcomes
4. Why Reshuffling AOSD Phenotypes Is Needed
4.1. The Contribution of Research on SJIA: The Concepts of Window of Opportunity, Treat-to-Target and Phenotype Change
4.2. The Example of a Recent Case Series: New Articular form of AOSD or Alternate Diagnosis of an Associated Inflammatory Joint Disease?
4.3. AOSD as a SAID at the Crossroad of Other (Auto)Inflammatory Disorders and Points Left Unresolved
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cardinal Manifestations |
Skin rash |
Fever > 39 °C |
Leukocytes > 10,000/mm3, neutrophils > 80% |
Arthritis and arthralgia |
Other frequent manifestations |
Odynophagia, pharyngitis |
Myalgia, myositis |
Lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly |
Hepatomegaly, hepatitis |
Pericarditis, myocarditis, pleuritis, lung disease (interstitial lung infiltrates) |
Increased ESR, CRP, fibrinogen |
Increased ferritin, decreased glycosylated ferritin |
Life-threatening complications |
Tamponade, myocarditis, and acute respiratory syndrome |
Pulmonary arterial hypertension |
Fulminant hepatitis |
Macrophage activation syndrome |
Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy |
Thrombotic microangiopathy |
Criteria | Yamaguchi et al. [4] | Fautrel et al. [5] |
---|---|---|
Major criteria | Fever ≥ 39 °C lasting one week or more Arthralgia lasting two weeks or more Typical skin rash: maculopapular, non-pruritic, salmon-pink rash with concomitant fever spikes Leukocytosis ≥ 10,000/mm3 with neutrophil polymorphonuclear proportion ≥ 80% | Spiking fever ≥ 39 °C Arthralgia Transient erythema Pharyngitis Neutrophil polymorphonuclear proportion ≥ 80% GF proportion ≤ 20% |
Minor criteria | Pharyngitis or sore throat Lymphadenopathy and/or splenomegaly Liver enzyme abnormalities (aminotransferases) Negative for RF or antinuclear antibodies | Typical rash Leukocytosis ≥ 10,000/mm3 |
Exclusion criteria | Absence of infection, especially sepsis and Epstein–Barr viral infection Absence of malignant diseases, especially Lymphomas Absence of inflammatory disease, especially polyarteritis nodosa | None |
Criteria requirement | At least five criteria, including two major criteria and no exclusion criteria | Four major criteria or three major criteria and two minor criteria |
Set performance | Sensitivity 96.3%, specificity 98.2%, PPV 94.6% and NPV 99.3% Modified Yamaguchi criteria, i.e., Yamaguchi criteria and ferritin > ULN: sensitivity 100%, specificity 97.1%, PPV 87.1% and NPV 100% Alternative modified Yamaguchi criteria, i.e., Yamaguchi criteria and GF ≤ 20%: sensitivity 98.2%, specificity 98.6%, PPV 93.0% and NPV 99.6% [13] | Sensitivity 87.0%, Specificity 97.8%, PPV 88.7% and NPV 97.5% [13] |
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Mitrovic, S.; Fautrel, B. Clinical Phenotypes of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: New Insights from Pathophysiology and Literature Findings. J. Clin. Med. 2021, 10, 2633. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122633
Mitrovic S, Fautrel B. Clinical Phenotypes of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: New Insights from Pathophysiology and Literature Findings. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2021; 10(12):2633. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122633
Chicago/Turabian StyleMitrovic, Stéphane, and Bruno Fautrel. 2021. "Clinical Phenotypes of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: New Insights from Pathophysiology and Literature Findings" Journal of Clinical Medicine 10, no. 12: 2633. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122633
APA StyleMitrovic, S., & Fautrel, B. (2021). Clinical Phenotypes of Adult-Onset Still’s Disease: New Insights from Pathophysiology and Literature Findings. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(12), 2633. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10122633