Genetic architecture distinguishes systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis from other forms of juvenile idiopathic arthritis: clinical and therapeutic implications
Tarih
2017Yazar
Rosenberg, Alan M.
Grom, Alexei A.
FOELL, Dirk
MARTINI, Alberto
ROSEN-WOLFF, Angela
MINDEN, Kirsten
TENBROCK, Klaus
Demirkaya, Erkan
Cobb, Joanna
BASKIN, Elizabeth
SIGNA, Sara
SHULDINER, Emily
DUERR, Richard H.
ACHKAR, Jean-Paul
KAMBOH, M. Ilyas
Kaufman, Kenneth M.
Kottyan, Leah C.
PINTO, Dalila
Scherer, Stephen W.
ALARCON-RIQUELME, Marta E.
DOCAMPO, Elisa
ESTIVILL, Xavier
Langefeld, Carl D.
Thompson, Susan
ZEGGINI, Eleftheria
KASTNER, Daniel L.
Woo, Patricia
Thomson, Wendy
Gül, Ahmet
GATTORNO, Marco
ARTHUR, Victoria L.
ÖZEN, SEZA
Prahalad, Sampath
ZEFT, Andrew S.
BOHNSACK, John F.
Ilowite, Norman T.
Mellins, Elizabeth D.
RUSSO, Ricardo
LEN, Claudio
HILARIO, Maria Odete E.
Oliveira, Sheila
Yeung, Rae S. M.
Wedderburn, Lucy R.
ANTON, Jordi
HAAS, Johannes-Peter
OMBRELLO, Michael J.
REMMERS, Elaine F.
Hinks, Anne
TACHMAZIDOU, Ioanna
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Objectives Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a heterogeneous group of conditions unified by the presence of chronic childhood arthritis without an identifiable cause. Systemic JIA (sJIA) is a rare form of JIA characterised by systemic inflammation. sJIA is distinguished from other forms of JIA by unique clinical features and treatment responses that are similar to autoinflammatory diseases. However, approximately half of children with sJIA develop destructive, long-standing arthritis that appears similar to other forms of JIA. Using genomic approaches, we sought to gain novel insights into the pathophysiology of sJIA and its relationship with other forms of JIA.
Koleksiyonlar
- Makale [92796]