Overview of the Treatment Goal, the Method of Evaluating Disease Activity/Physical Function, Activities of Daily Living, and Traditional Care for Systemic or Articular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in Japan
Abstract
:1. What Kind of Disease Is Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (JIA)?
1.1. Concepts and Classification
1.2. Epidemiology
1.3. Pathophysiology
2. What Is the Treatment Goal of JIA?
2.1. What Is the Treatment Goal?
2.2. What Is T2T?
3. What Methods Are Available for Assessing Disease Activity Levels of JIA?
Indices of Remission and Assessment of Disease Activity by Disease Type
4. What Methods Are Used to Assess Physical Function and ADLs in JIA?
CHAQ and mRS
5. Traditional Care
5.1. Pediatric Knowledge
5.2. What Is “Transitional Care?”
5.3. When Is the Appropriate Transition Period?
5.4. Transitional Goals
6. Health Education
6.1. What Knowledge Should the Medical Staff Have and How Should They Talk to the Patient?
6.2. School Attendance and Job Placement
6.3. Pregnancy (Including Contraception) and Childbirth
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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A | Treatment goals and strategies should be agreed upon by the parents/patient and the pediatric rheumatology team. |
B | JIA is a heterogeneous group of diseases and requires a clear therapeutic approach. |
C | The treatment goals for JIA patients are to control symptoms, prevent structural damage, avoid complications and side effects of medications, and optimize physical function, growth and development, quality of life, and participation in social activities. |
D | To achieve these goals, it is essential to reduce inflammation. |
E | Prolonged use of systemic corticosteroids to maintain goals should be avoided. |
F | To achieve these goals, regular assessment of disease activity and modification of treatment accordingly is important. |
1 | The treatment goal for JIA is to achieve clinical remission, i.e., to achieve a state in which there are no clinical signs or symptoms of disease activity, including extra-articular symptoms. |
2 | Reducing disease activity to a low level may be an immediate treatment goal, especially in patients with prolonged disease. |
3 | The setting of treatment goals and the selection of treatment methods should be based on the individual characteristics of each patient and agreed upon with the parents/patient. |
4 | Assessment of disease activity should be performed and documented regularly using composite indices. |
5 | The frequency of evaluation depends on the type of JIA, the degree of disease activity, and the presence of extra-articular symptoms. Patients with systemic JIA and high disease activity should be evaluated weekly, patients with moderate to high disease activity every 1 to 3 months, and less frequently in patients who are in clinical remission. |
6 | All patients should achieve a 50% or greater improvement in disease activity within 3 months and achieve the established treatment goal within 6 months. In patients with systemic JIA and high disease activity, the goal should be to achieve resolution of fever within 1 week. |
7 | Treatment must be adjusted and reviewed until goals are achieved. |
8 | Once treatment goals are achieved, they must be maintained. Therefore, continuous monitoring should be carried out. |
Modified Rankin Scale | Points of Reference | |
---|---|---|
0 | There are no symptoms at all. | There are no subjective symptoms or objective signs of the condition. |
1 | Symptomatic but no obvious disability: Able to perform daily tasks and activities. | Subjective symptoms and objective signs are present, but there are no restrictions on work or activities that the patient had been partaking in before the onset of the disease. |
2 | Mild disability: Not able to perform all the activities they were able to perform before the onset of the disease, but able to perform their daily activities without assistance. | The patient is independent in daily life, although there are some limitations in the work and activities that they had been engaged in prior to the onset of the disease. |
3 | Moderate disability: Requires some assistance but can walk without assistance. | The patient needs assistance with shopping and going on public transportation, but does not need assistance with usual walking, eating, grooming, toileting, and other activities. |
4 | Moderate to severe disability: Walking and physical demands require assistance. | The patient requires assistance with usual walking, eating, grooming, toileting, etc., but does not require continuous nursing care. |
5 | Severe disability: Bedridden, incontinent, requiring constant care and monitoring. | Always in need of assistance from someone. |
6 | Death |
Class I | Physical functions are complete, and the patient can perform all normal tasks without any disability. |
Class II | The patient may have pain in one or more joints during movement or may have limited movement but be able to manage normal activities. |
Class III | The patient can perform normal work and personal tasks with little or no ability to do so. |
Class IV | The patient is bedridden or uses a wheelchair, with little or no ability to perform daily personal activities. |
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Mori, M. Overview of the Treatment Goal, the Method of Evaluating Disease Activity/Physical Function, Activities of Daily Living, and Traditional Care for Systemic or Articular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in Japan. Children 2024, 11, 952. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11080952
Mori M. Overview of the Treatment Goal, the Method of Evaluating Disease Activity/Physical Function, Activities of Daily Living, and Traditional Care for Systemic or Articular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in Japan. Children. 2024; 11(8):952. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11080952
Chicago/Turabian StyleMori, Masaaki. 2024. "Overview of the Treatment Goal, the Method of Evaluating Disease Activity/Physical Function, Activities of Daily Living, and Traditional Care for Systemic or Articular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in Japan" Children 11, no. 8: 952. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11080952
APA StyleMori, M. (2024). Overview of the Treatment Goal, the Method of Evaluating Disease Activity/Physical Function, Activities of Daily Living, and Traditional Care for Systemic or Articular Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis in Japan. Children, 11(8), 952. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11080952