Article Text
Abstract
Objectives This meta-analysis investigated the frequency of ocular involvement in childhood and adult spondyloarthritis (SpA).
Methods A systematic review of the literature was conducted. Medline, Web of Science and Cochrane databases were searched upto October 2018 identifying publications related to SpA, including ankylosing spondylitis (AS) with ocular conditions (OC) (uveitis, iritis, retinitis, chorioretinitis and other ocular involvement). The rates of OC were extracted and random effects models estimated their frequency. Heterogeneity was evaluated using I2. Inclusion criteria were studies in SpA of either children or adults who included a frequency of OC.
Results 3164 studies were identified, and 41 analysed which included frequencies of uveitis/iritis. Other OC were too infrequent to analyse. A pooled random effects model showed that the prevalence of uveitis was 24% in adult AS (23 studies, 11 943 patients), 10% in adult psoriatic arthritis (PsA) (9 studies, 1817) and 17% in undifferentiated adult SpA (9 studies, 6568 patients). In juveniles with AS, the prevalence of uveitis was 27% (8 studies, 927 patients), in juvenile PsA it was 16% (5 studies, N=498) and in juvenile undifferentiated SpA, uveitis occurred in 7% (2 studies, 1531 patients). In all evaluated SpA subgroups, there were no statistical differences in the frequency of uveitis between juveniles and adults.
Conclusions Uveitis in adult versus child-onset SpA is similar in AS but more common in adult-onset undifferentiated SpA, and less frequent in adult-onset PsA compared to child-onset PsA, but the differences were not significant.
- Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
- Ankylosing Spondylitis
- Psoriatic Arthritis
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INTRODUCTION
Adult spondyloarthritis (SpA) is characterised by abnormal bone overgrowth and inflammatory erosive osteopenia in the spine.1 2 It usually begins under the age of 40 and is more common in men. SpA may be associated with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis (PsA), inflammatory bowel disease, reactive arthritis, enthesitis, and ocular features such as acute anterior iritis, and chronic uveitis (anterior or posterior, unilateral or bilateral).3 Juvenile SpA (JSpA) onsets in children under 16 years, and at the beginning of the disease, it may present with more peripheral enthesopathies and arthritis than adult SpA.4 Children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis have more ocular involvement than many adult-onset types of inflammatory arthritis. Due to differences in clinical presentation, we wondered if adult SpA and JSpA may have different frequencies of uveitis.
Supplemental material
Supplemental material
Uveitis in SpA is usually acute unilateral anterior iritis, which is associated with Human Leucocyte Antigen B27 (HLA-B27) positivity. However, in PsA, ocular involvement is less common than in ankylosing spondylitis (AS) and tends to present as bilateral posterior uveitis.5 Despite reductions in uveitis with treatment such as monoclonal antibodies against Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF), some patients experience decreased vision, blindness, cataracts and glaucoma as complications of their disease and/or treatment.6
We conducted a systematic review of the literature and meta-analysis of ocular manifestations to determine their frequency in adult and juvenile seronegative SpA. Previous efforts have determined the prevalence of uveitis in SpA; however, children were not included in this study.7 The prevalence of uveitis in JSpA has also been reported but did not include adult-onset SpA.8
METHODS
Study selection
The protocol of ocular conditions (OC) in rheumatic conditions was registered at clintrials.gov with the trial ID NCT03753893. Using the literature search, we studied several questions with respect to ocular manifestations of rheumatic diseases, and for this question, we compared adult versus juvenile onset of uveitis and other ocular manifestations in SpA. Search terms related to ocular complications in adult and pediatric seronegative SpA are provided in online supplemental table 1. Web of Science, Medline and Cochrane were searched from their commencement (1990, 1966 and 1991, respectively) to October 2, 2018. Studies were reviewed if they mentioned a prevalence of OC in adult and/or paediatric patients. Publications were included if they included any SpA category such as AS, PsA and undifferentiated SpA.
Inclusion criteria
Studies were included if they provided the frequency, prevalence or incidence of ocular manifestations in the diagnoses of interest (SpA spectrum arthritis in adults and children). Review articles, case reports where all patients experienced the same ocular comorbidity and if the study included less than 20 patients were reasons to be excluded. If the study population was repeated in two or more publications, the most recent or largest sample size study was included in order to eliminate double counting patients. The STROBE (Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology) checklist was used to assess the quality of included studies.9 Differences between adults and children overall for SpA and within the subsets of AS, PsA and undifferentiated SpA were evaluated for significance using χ² tests.10
Data extraction
Data such as the authors, study year and location, sample size and frequency of each ocular complication (primarily uveitis) within the SpA diagnoses and adult or child onset were obtained from each paper. If a study included a paediatric and adult subset, they were treated independently for the purposes of data extraction.
Statistics
Forest plots were created with a 95% CI with Wilson’s score method, from the frequencies of OC extracted from the data. Variance was used to create study weights using a random effects model to account for differences in study size and quality.11 I-squared and tau-squared tests were used to determine heterogeneity within each forest plot. Publication bias was estimated by the symmetry of funnel plots.
RESULTS
The search process identified 3164 articles, of which 41 were eligible for inclusion (figure 1). These 41 articles reported on the frequency of uveitis. Online supplemental table 2 shows the publications that were included and whether they were for adult or paediatric and AS or SpA or PsA. The table also provides the country, total sample and number with ocular involvement and the STROBE score. A pooled random effects model showed that the prevalence of uveitis was 24% (20–27%) in adult AS (23 studies, N=11 943 patients), 10% (7–14%) in adult PsA (9 studies, N=1817) and 17% (10–24%) in undifferentiated adult SpA (9 studies, 6568 patients) (figure 2). In juveniles with AS, the prevalence of uveitis was 27% (16–39%) (eight studies, 927 patients). In child-onset PsA (JPsA), uveitis occurred in 16% (10–21%) (five studies, N=498), and in juvenile undifferentiated SpA, uveitis had a frequency of 7% (1–12%) (two studies, N=1531) (figure 3).
Supplemental material
The differences in frequency of uveitis in adults versus child-onset SpA spectrum diseases were not significantly different between AS and JAS (p=0.891), PsA and JPsA (p=0.732) and between SpA and JSpA (p=0.751).
A random effects model was used to generate forest plots as heterogeneity for several of the prevalence estimates was high. Publication bias was mostly negligible except in adult AS (online supplemental figure 1A).
DISCUSSION
These results provide comparison of patients (adults vs children) for AS, undifferentiated SpA and PsA and illustrate that the frequency is not statistically different in child versus adult onset but varies between the disease types. PsA has less uveitis than AS and more posterior uveitis than AS and undifferentiated SpA.
As with many studies of this nature, there are several limitations, chiefly development and standardisations of novel treatments during the period of data collection. These treatments may have an impact on the prevalence of ocular comorbidities as some are treated in conjunction with their underlying disease.12 13 The frequency of uveitis varied between studies, and definitions were not standardised. There was heterogeneity in several of the Forest plots. Disease duration and length of follow-up varied between cohorts, and so the life-long risk of child onset SpA may or may not be higher than what was found. For example, if most uveitis onsets early in disease, then younger age may not be an important confounder. Whereas if there is a steady linear increase in the first iritis over years, then it could be underestimated in younger patients, which is unlikely.14 There was no standardised follow-up period between studies.
The search did not include EMBASE and so some articles may have been missed if they were only published in journals that are not included in the other databases that were searched. However, since there were no differences between the frequency of uveitis in SpA in adults versus children, it is unlikely that there would be enough articles with large sample sizes that would change the conclusions. We did not search enthesitis-related arthritis and so in particular may have missed child-onset SpA studies. A recent study (published after our search) demonstrated that in National Pediatric Database in Germany (a national registry with nearly 25 000 juvenile inflammatory arthritis (JIA) patients), 7.4% of children with enthesitis-related arthritis were diagnosed with uveitis (53). This supports our results where 7% of PSpA had uveitis. Another limitation to this meta-analysis is potential publication bias as negative studies (or papers with low frequency of ocular involvement) are likely not published. As such, reporting of OC in published literature may be an underestimate or overestimate of reality (ascertainment may not have been verified, recall bias may have occurred for those with long disease duration or misdiagnosis of acute anterior iritis may have happened in some patients). Another limitation is the lack of disease outcome or activity, other comorbidities and cofounders. In addition, we were unable to estimate the incidence of uveitis, but instead used a cumulative prevalence (ever present uveitis or overall frequency).
The prevalence of uveitis was determined to be ~33% in SpA, but their study excluded juvenile spondylopathies.7 Our study found the prevalence to be lower (one in four whereas the other study suggested it was one in three).
CONCLUSIONS
There were no statistical differences between adult and childhood onset of uveitis in SpA. AS was reported to have the most uveitis, then undifferentiated SpA and PsA had the least.
Key messages
In some forms of childhood arthritis compared to adult arthritis, uveitis is more common (such as oligoarticular JIA). However, the prevalence of uveitis in child-onset versus adult-onset seronegative spondyloarthritis may differ.
This meta-analysis compared the frequency of uveitis in spondyloarthritis in adults and children including the spectrum of AS, undifferentiated SpA and PsA.
It appears that the frequency of uveitis is not statistically different in adult-onset versus child-onset ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis and undifferentiated spondyloarthritis.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Brad Dishan for his help in designing the search strategy. We would also like to acknowledge the abstract by Tinazzi et al, presented at EULAR in 2019.15
REFERENCES
Footnotes
Contributors JH and MT were involved in literature search, study design and manuscript writing. TN was involved in statistical analyses and manuscript writing. JP was involved in study design, statistical analyses and manuscript writing.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent for publication Not required.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Data availability statement All data relevant to the study are included in the article or uploaded as supplementary information.
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