AI Article Synopsis

  • The study describes Behçet's disease (BD) in children using data from the largest prospective cohort to date, aiming to categorize the disease.
  • An international expert group established minimum symptoms for including patients and analyzed 219 subjects from 42 centers across 12 countries.
  • Findings indicate that males exhibit different symptoms compared to females, and oral aphthosis is the most common initial sign, with a proposed classification containing six categories for diagnosing pediatric BD in future clinical trials.

Article Abstract

Background: We aimed to describe the main features of Behçet's disease (BD) in children in the largest prospective cohort to date and to propose a classification.

Methods: An international expert consensus group was formed to define a data set of minimal symptoms for the inclusion of patients. Patients were entered prospectively during 66 months. Experts classified patients on a consensus basis. The concordance of two international classifications was analysed in confirmed patients with BD. Comparisons of subgroups of patients helped define consensus criteria. BD-associated clinical manifestations were also investigated in three control diseases extracted from an independent data set (Eurofever).

Findings: In total, 42 centres from 12 countries included 230 patients; data for 219 (M/F ratio=1) could be analysed. The experts classified 156 patients (71.2%) as having confirmed BD. Males more often than females showed cutaneous, ocular and vascular symptoms and females more often genital aphthosis. Age at disease onset and skin and vascular involvement were lower for European than non-European children. Oral aphthosis was the presenting sign for 81% (179/219) of patients. The mean delay to the second symptom was 2.9±2.2 years. International classifications were not concordant with the expert classification. Our paediatric classification contains six categories, a minimum of three signs (each in a distinct category) defining paediatric BD. Three clinical signs discriminated our cohort from the Eurofever cohorts.

Interpretation: We present a comprehensive description of a large cohort of patients from both European and non-European countries and propose the first classification of paediatric BD for future therapeutic trials.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2015-208491DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients
9
behçet's disease
8
data set
8
experts classified
8
international classifications
8
european non-european
8
classification paediatric
8
consensus
4
consensus classification
4
classification criteria
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!