AI Article Synopsis

  • Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a complex and poorly understood condition thought to have genetic influences, characterized by a variety of arthritis types with an unknown origin.
  • *The study focused on 43 patients with LACC1-associated juvenile arthritis, identifying genetic variants and providing clinical details, including a high prevalence of early onset disease and aggressive treatment responses.
  • *Results showed that a significant portion of patients exhibited severe forms of arthritis and poor treatment outcomes, expanding the understanding of LACC1's role in JIA pathology.

Article Abstract

Background: The classification and pathogenic basis of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) are a subject of some controversy. Essentially, JIA is an exclusion diagnosis that represents a phenotypically heterogeneous group of arthritis of unknown origin. Familial aggregation of JIA supports the concept of genetic influence in the pathogenesis of JIA.

Objective: To present the spectrum of laccase domain-containing 1 (LACC1)-associated juvenile arthritis with clinical, biochemical, and molecular genetic data of a cohort of 43 patients, including 11 previously unpublished cases.

Methods: We studied 11 patients with different categories of juvenile idiopathic arthritis from 5 consanguineous families, all from Saudi Arabia, except 2 patients who were of Jordanian ethnicity. Whole-exome sequencing was used to identify the disease-causing variant of LACC1. We also reviewed the clinical spectrum and molecular genetic data of previously published cases of LACC1-associated juvenile arthritis.

Results: This study describes 43 (29 females, 14 males) patients from consanguineous multiplex families. Most of the included patients were of Arab origin with 86% having early onset disease. The most frequent categories were systemic (19 patients) and rheumatoid factor-negative polyarticular (19 patients). Thirty-seven (86%) had progressive erosive arthritis and 10 (23.3%) had persistent limb lymphedema. None of the patients had features of macrophage activation syndrome. Genetic analysis confirmed LACC1 variant in all patients; 22 patients had common founder mutation (LACC1: c.850T > C,p.C284R), while the others showed different LACC1 variants. All patients were treated aggressively with methotrexate and sequential biologic agents. Most of them showed a poor response to treatment.

Conclusion: This report expands the pathogenic variants of LACC1 and the clinical spectrum associated with this genetic subset of juvenile arthritis. The predominance of autosomal-recessive inheritance and strong genetic evidence allowed us to propose LACC1-associated juvenile arthritis as a distinct disorder.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7922844PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpam.2020.11.005DOI Listing

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