AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) in children, analyzing data from 56 pediatric patients diagnosed before age 18.
  • Most of the patients were female (68%) and Caucasian (82%), with a median diagnosis age of around 11.7 years and an average diagnosis delay of 4.2 months.
  • Clinical signs were predominantly seen in the ears, nose, throat, and respiratory system, with a notable percentage of patients testing positive for ANCA-PR3 and presenting with haematuria/proteinuria, showing different patterns of organ involvement compared to adults.

Article Abstract

Background: Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), formerly known as Wegener's granulomatosis (WG), belongs to the group of ANCA-associated necrotizing vasculitides. This study describes the clinical picture of the disease in a large cohort of GPA paediatric patients. Children with age at diagnosis ≤ 18 years, fulfilling the EULAR/PRINTO/PRES GPA/WG classification criteria were extracted from the PRINTO vasculitis database. The clinical signs/symptoms and laboratory features were analysed before or at the time of diagnosis and at least 3 months thereafter and compared with other paediatric and adult case series (>50 patients) derived from the literature.

Findings: The 56 children with GPA/WG were predominantly females (68%) and Caucasians (82%) with a median age at disease onset of 11.7 years, and a median delay in diagnosis of 4.2 months. The most frequent organ systems involved before/at the time of diagnosis were ears, nose, throat (91%), constitutional (malaise, fever, weight loss) (89%), respiratory (79%), mucosa and skin (64%), musculoskeletal (59%), and eye (35%), 67% were ANCA-PR3 positive, while haematuria/proteinuria was present in > 50% of the children. In adult series, the frequency of female involvement ranged from 29% to 50% with lower frequencies of constitutional (fever, weight loss), ears, nose, throat (oral/nasal ulceration, otitis/aural discharge), respiratory (tracheal/endobronchial stenosis/obstruction), laboratory involvement and higher frequency of conductive hearing loss than in this paediatric series.

Conclusions: Paediatric patients compared to adults with GPA/WG have similar pattern of clinical manifestations but different frequencies of organ involvement.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4041043PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1546-0096-12-18DOI Listing

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