To the Editor:
Joint pain and swelling are common symptoms of patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) with active joint inflammation. When patients with JIA have persistent pain or mechanical symptoms despite treatment of their inflammation, other causes must be considered.
Osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) is a focal alteration of subchondral bone formation that causes softening of the overlying cartilage, which can progress to instability, eventual osteochondral detachment, and early osteoarthritis1. Poorly localized knee pain with activity is common in early OCD lesions, and progresses to swelling, catching, or locking as the lesion becomes unstable1. The incidence in the general population is 9.5–29/100,000, occurring 2–3.8 times more frequently in males than females1,2,3. The most commonly affected joint is the knee1. Fifty-one to 69% of knee lesions affect the medial femoral condyle (MFC), and 16.5–33% affect the lateral femoral condyle (LFC)1,2,3. First-line management is conservative, with 33.5% requiring surgical intervention4. Multiple theories regarding the etiology of OCD lesions have been proposed, including repetitive microtrauma, focal ischemia, and genetic predisposition1. König initially theorized an inflammatory etiology when coining the term osteochondritis dissecans5. Despite major advances in the understanding of OCD, many issues regarding its pathophysiology remain unresolved6.
Our study has received the approval of the Western Research Ethics Board and Lawson Research Ethics Board (approval number R-19-269). Informed telephone consent was obtained from each patient or his or her substitute decision maker. The Western Research Ethics Board waived the requirement for written consent on the basis that many of the patients attend in-person hospital visits infrequently.
We identified 10 patients between January 2010 and June 2018 with JIA who were found to have OCD as the cause of knee pain and mechanical issues. During this period our clinic saw 20–25 new cases of JIA per year.
Table 1 describes the clinical characteristics of patients with concomitant JIA and OCD. Nine of the patients were female. The mean age of patients at the time of JIA diagnosis was 6.16 ± 3.74 years (mean ± SD). There were 2 patients with psoriatic, 3 oligoarticular, 1 extended oligoarticular, 3 polyarticular arthritis, and 1 patient with systemic JIA. Eight of 10 patients received methotrexate at some point during their treatment. Four patients received biologics. Of these, 3 initially received a tumor necrosis factor-α inhibitor (adalimumab, infliximab, or etanercept), and the third, with systemic JIA, initially received anakinra.
Demographics and clinical characteristics of patients with JIA and OCD.
Table 2 describes the characteristics of OCD lesions. All patients had knee radiographs followed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Indications for imaging were persistent or focal pain, catching or locking, or trauma. Six patients had lesions involving the right knee, and 4 had lesions involving the left knee. Four lesions involved the MFC, 4 involved the LFC, and 2 involved the patella.
Characteristics of OCD lesions in patients with JIA.
The mean age of patients at the time of diagnosis with OCD was 10.85 ± 1.74 years (mean ± SD). The mean interval between JIA and OCD diagnosis was 4.69 ± 4.50 years (mean ± SD). All patients had JIA-related disease activity in the joint affected by OCD. Three patients had an existing OCD lesion at the time of JIA diagnosis. All 7 patients with JIA onset prior to the diagnosis of OCD received intraarticular glucocorticoid injections of the joint subsequently affected by OCD. The number of joint injections varied between 1 and 5. Patients 2 and 7 reported previous minor falls onto the subsequently affected knee, and patient 10 had OCD identified during imaging following a kick to the flexed knee during a soccer game. Four patients without mechanical symptoms underwent nonoperative management with rest and activity modification, including avoidance of high-impact sports and repetitive load-bearing activities. Six patients with locking or worsening pain underwent arthroscopic examination. Of these, 5 lesions were debrided, 1 was microfractured, and 1 received transarticular drilling. Outcomes are listed in Table 2.
In patients with JIA who have persistent or focal joint pain, or atypical symptoms such as catching or locking, alternative diagnoses such as OCD should be considered, particularly when these symptoms are present while inflammatory disease is clinically inactive. Imaging with radiographs and MRI can help clarify the diagnosis. In contrast to previous epidemiologic studies, this population was mostly female; the distribution of lesions was atypical (the LFC was affected as often as the MFC, and 2 patellar lesions were identified); and 50% of the patients required surgical management. The atypical sex and anatomic distributions are in agreement with previous studies by Kröger, et al7 and Kubo, et al8.
The etiology of OCD in patients with JIA compared with healthy children affected with OCD may be different. Persistent synovitis may increase the risk of cartilage damage9 and the development of OCD; glucocorticoid injections may affect the risk of developing OCD through effects on cartilage metabolism10 and mechanical disruption of the articular surface; and altered gait biomechanics related to joint pain may change load distribution in joints affected by JIA. Further prospective studies are needed to better characterize the contribution of these factors to the development of OCD lesions in patients with JIA.