Systemic onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis
Systemic-onset JIA (S-JIA) comprises around 10% of JIA (1,2)
- it is responsible for a significant percentage of the morbidity and mortality caused by JIA
- affects both female and males with the same frequency
- may occur at any time during childhood
- unlike patients with other categories of JIA, those with systemic JIA present with markedly elevated levels of inflammatory markers, fevers, and rashes (3)
- in the initial presentation, arthritis may not be present
- early in the disease course, systemic JIA resembles monogenic autoinflammatory syndromes such as familial Mediterranean fever
Presentation of the condition (1,2)
- arthritis
- normally polyarticular
- presents within the first 3 months of onset
- extra-articular features
- intermittent fever for at least 2 weeks plus one of the following
- temperature rises up to 39.5 °C once or twice in a day
- generally accompanied by a typical, salmon pink-coloured rash
- typical rash
- classic salmon-coloured evanescent rash
- there is discrete circumscribed macules that may be surrounded by a ring of pallor or develop central clearing
- vanishes with the decline of the fever
- found most commonly on the trunk, axilla, and inguinal areas
- may be exacerbated by stress, or a hot bath
- generalized lymphadenopathy
- seen in about one-third of patients
- hepatosplenomegaly
- seen in about one-third of patients
- serositis
- includes pericarditis and pleuritis
- intermittent fever for at least 2 weeks plus one of the following
Note:
- fever and rash generally resolve after the emergence of polyarthritis making the diagnosis of S-JIA difficult to differentiate from regular polyarticular JIA
Reference:
- Barut K, Adrovic A, Şahin S, Kasapçopur Ö. Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. Balkan Medical Journal. 2017;34(2):90-101.
- Kahn P.Juvenile idiopathic arthritis - an update on pharmacotherapy. Bull NYU Hosp Jt Dis. 2011;69(3):264-76.
- Sandborg CI et al. Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis. NEJM 2025;393:162-174
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