Objective

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is characterized by chronic arthritis and an autoimmune etiology. In several autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), an association with the 4q27 locus has been reported. We undertook this study to investigate the possible role of the 4q27 locus in JIA.

Methods

A case-control association study was conducted, with a total of 655 Caucasian JIA patients and 791 healthy controls divided into 2 independent sample sets. The rs6822844 marker in the 4q27 locus was genotyped.

Results

In the first and larger sample set, a 5% decrease in T allele frequency was observed in patients compared with controls (allelic odds ratio [OR] 0.72 [95% confidence interval 0.55-0.95], P = 0.019), and in the second set, a 3% decrease was observed (allelic OR 0.81 [95% confidence interval 0.61-1.09], P = 0.169). The combined data set generated an OR of 0.76 (95% confidence interval 0.62-0.93, P = 7.08 x 10(-3)). When the different JIA subtypes were analyzed individually, significant decreases were seen in the subtypes with a polyarticular course of disease (extended oligoarthritis [P = 0.019] and rheumatoid factor-negative polyarthritis [P = 0.038]).

Conclusion

Our findings suggest that the 4q27 locus, previously reported to be associated with RA, type 1 diabetes mellitus, celiac disease, and psoriatic arthritis, is also associated with susceptibility to JIA.

Overview publication

TitleAssociation of the autoimmunity locus 4q27 with juvenile idiopathic arthritis.
DateMarch 1st, 2009
Issue nameArthritis and rheumatism
Issue numberv60.3:901-4
DOI10.1002/art.24296
PubMed19248117
AuthorsAlbers HM, Kurreeman FA, Stoeken-Rijsbergen G, Brinkman DM, Kamphuis SS, van Rossum MA, Girschick HJ, Wouters C, Saurenmann RK, Hoppenreijs E, Slagboom P, Houwing-Duistermaat JJ, Verduijn W, Huizinga TW, Ten Cate R, Toes RE & Schilham MW
Read Read publication