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Impact of age at diagnosis, sex, and immunopathological manifestations in 886 patients with pediatric chronic immune thrombocytopenia.

Thomas PincezHelder FernandesMarlène PasquetWadih Abou ChahlaJérome GranelSébastien HéritierMony FahdStéphane DucassouCaroline ThomasNathalie GarnierVincent BarlogisEric JeziorskiSophie BayartPascal ChastagnerNathalie CheikhCorinne GuittonCatherine PaillardJulien LejeuneFrédéric MillotValérie Li-Thiao TeCoralie MallebrancheIsabelle PellierBénédicte NevenCorinne Armari-AllaLiana CarausuChristophe PiguetJoy BenadibaClaire PluchartJean-Louis StephanMarianna DeparisClaire BriandetEric DoréAude Marie-CardineThierry LeblancGuy LevergerNathalie Aladjidi
Published in: American journal of hematology (2023)
Pediatric chronic immune thrombocytopenia (cITP) is a heterogeneous condition in terms of bleeding severity, second-line treatment use, association with clinical and/or biological immunopathological manifestations (IMs), and progression to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). No risk factors for these outcomes are known. Specifically, whether age at ITP diagnosis, sex and IMs impact cITP outcomes is unknown. We report the outcomes of patients with pediatric cITP from the French nationwide prospective cohort OBS'CEREVANCE. We used multivariate analyses to investigate the effect of age at ITP diagnosis, sex and IMs on cITP outcomes. We included 886 patients with a median (min-max) follow-up duration of 5.3 (1.0-29.3) years. We identified an age cutoff that dichotomized the outcomes risk and defined two risk groups: patients with ITP diagnosed <10 years (children) and ≥ 10 years (adolescents). Adolescents had a two to four-fold higher risk of grade ≥3 bleeding, second-line treatment use, clinical and biological IMs, and SLE diagnosis. Moreover, female sex and biological IMs were independently associated with higher risks of biological IMs and SLE diagnosis, and second-line treatment use and SLE diagnosis, respectively. The combination of these three risk factors defined outcome-specific risk groups. Finally, we showed that patients clustered in mild and severe phenotypes, more frequent in children and adolescents, respectively. In conclusion, we identified that age at ITP diagnosis, sex, and biological IMs impacted the long-term outcomes of pediatric cITP. We defined risk groups for each outcome, that will help clinical management and further studies. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
  • systemic lupus erythematosus
  • disease activity
  • risk factors
  • physical activity
  • ejection fraction
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • newly diagnosed
  • combination therapy
  • chronic kidney disease
  • patient reported outcomes