Objective: The aim of this study was to carry out a safety evaluation of biologic agents in patients with JIA and associated uveitis.
Methods: In three tertiary centres in Finland, all adverse events (AEs) in 348 consecutive patients were collected. AEs were classified according to the Common Terminology Criteria for AEs.
Results: A total of 1516 patient-years (py) were included: 710 on etanercept, 591 on infliximab, 188 on adalimumab, 8 on rituximab, 5 on anakinra, 6 on tocilizumab, 6 on abatacept and 1 on golimumab. The median follow-up of an individual patient was 51 months (range 1-155). The most common of the 2902 AEs (191/100 py) observed were mild infections, infusion or injection site reactions and alanine aminotransferase elevations. At least one AE occurred in 319 (92%) patients and 121 (35%) had at least one serious AE (SAE). The rate of SAEs was 11.4/100 py on etanercept, 11.8 on infliximab, 10.1 on adalimumab, 15.7 on abatacept, 31.2 on tocilizumab and 87.5 on rituximab, higher than with most anti-TNF agents (P = 0.005). No cases of malignant neoplasms or tuberculosis were detected. New-onset uveitis occurred in 9 patients, psoriasis or psoriasiform lesions in 13 and IBD in 6.
Conclusion: Mild and moderate AEs in patients with JIA treated with biologics were more frequent than previously reported. SAEs were observed in one-third of the patients, but SAEs seldom led to drug discontinuation.
Keywords: adverse drug event; anti-TNF; anti-rheumatic agent; biologic therapy; disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug; juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
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