RMD Open (Oct 2023)

Diagnostic and prognostic role of synovial tissue analysis in juvenile idiopathic arthritis: a monocentric study

  • Francesca Pregnolato,
  • Roberto Caporali,
  • ANTONINA PARAFIORITI,
  • Cecilia Beatrice Chighizola,
  • Elisabetta Armiraglio,
  • Achille Marino,
  • Pietro Simone Randelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/rmdopen-2023-003296
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4

Abstract

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Objectives This study investigates the diagnostic role of synovial tissue analysis in children presenting with arthritis and assesses its prognostic significance to predict clinical outcome in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA).Methods Synovial samples of paediatric patients undergoing synovial biopsy between 1995 and 2020 were analysed histologically and immunohistochemically. Relationships between histological/immunohistochemical parameters and clinical variables were assessed.Results Synovial biopsy was performed for diagnosis in 65 cases allowing to correctly classify 79% of patients.At histological analysis on 42 JIA samples, any difference in the number of synovial lining layers, subsynovial elementary lesions, fibrin deposit, Krenn Synovitis Score, inflammatory infiltrate score and pattern emerged between JIA subsets or on treatment exposure. Synovial tissue analysis predicted outcome: higher number of synovial layers predicted worse disease course (>4 flares during follow-up; 4.5 vs 3.0, p=0.035), even after adjusting for age at diagnosis and observation time (OR 2.2, p=0.007); subjects who had switched>2 biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs had higher prevalence of subsynovial elementary lesions (55.6% vs 10.3%, p=0.005) and fibrin deposits in synovial lining (60.0% vs 22.6%, p=0.049), even after adjustment for observation time and age at diagnosis (OR 8.1, p=0.047). At immunohistochemistry on 31 JIA samples, higher CD3 expression was described in polyarticular compared with oligoarticular subset (p=0.040). Patients with severe disease course had higher CD20+ rate (OR 7, p=0.023), regardless of JIA subset and treatment exposure.Conclusions Synovial tissue analysis might support the clinicians in the diagnostic approach of paediatric patients presenting with arthritis and guide the clinical management in JIA.