Similarities and differences between systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis and adult-onset Still's disease: a multicenter Spanish study

Other authors

[Antón J] Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Barcelona, Spain. Departament de Cirurgia i Especialitats Mèdico-Quirúrgiques, Obstetrícia, Ginecologia i Pediatria, Facultat de Medicina i Ciències de la Salut, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. [Mosquera JM, Calzada J, Iglesias E, Zacarías A] Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, Barcelona, Spain. [Olivé A] Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol, Badalona, Spain. [Ortiz-Santamaria V] Hospital General de Granollers, Granollers, Spain.

Hospital General de Granollers

Publication date

2026-04-15T08:41:12Z

2026-04-15T08:41:12Z

2024-12



Abstract

Adult-onset still’s disease; Epidemiology; Juvenile arthritis;


Enfermedad de Still de inicio en la edad adulta; Epidemiología; Artritis juvenil


Malaltia de Still d'aparició en adults; Epidemiologia; Artritis juvenil


To describe the characteristics of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA) and adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD), compare their presentation and evolution, and analyse possible complication predictors. Multicenter study. Data were retrieved from a hospital-based study of patients with a diagnosis or suspected diagnosis of sJIA or AOSD according to the responsible physician and followed-up for at least one year. Descriptive variables (classification criteria, clinical manifestations, complications, family, and personal history) were collected at disease onset and during follow-up. We present the clinical characteristics of 326 patients, 67% of whom had a diagnosis of sJIA and 33% of AOSD. Clinical manifestation frequencies were similar between the two groups, except for odynophagia, which was significantly more frequent in AOSD than in sJIA (78.4% vs. 25.5%; p < 0.0001). Among the complications, macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) was significantly more common in sJIA than in AOSD (24.4% vs. 9.5%; p = 0.002), to the extent that an sJIA diagnosis significantly increased the risk of MAS, together with serositis presence, and the need for biological therapy. Patients with sJIA and AOSD showed similar characteristics, supporting the idea that they are both part of Still's disease, but are expressed at different ages. Differences in manifestations and complications might be due to different management between diseases and immune response maturity.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Springer

Related items

Rheumatology international;44(12)

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00296-024-05658-6

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

This item appears in the following Collection(s)