Child–Adult Transition in Sarcoidosis: A Series of 52 Patients

Author:

Chauveau Simon,Jeny FlorenceORCID,Montagne Marie-Emeline,Abou Taam Rola,Houdouin Véronique,Meinzer Ulrich,Delacourt Christophe,Epaud RalphORCID,Cohen Aubart Fleur,Chapelon-Abric Catherine,Israël-Biet Dominique,Juvin Karine,Dossier Antoine,Bodaghi Bahram,Prévot Grégoire,Naccache Jean-Marc,Mattioni SarahORCID,Deschildre Antoine,Brouard Jacques,Tazi Abdellatif,Meckenstock Roderich,Didier Morgane,Haroche Julien,Clement Annick,Bernaudin Jean-François,Nunes Hilario,Valeyre Dominique,Nathan NadiaORCID,

Abstract

(1) Background: Pediatric sarcoidosis is a rare and mostly severe disease. Very few pediatric series with a prolonged follow-up are reported. We aimed to evaluate the evolution of pediatric sarcoidosis in adulthood. (2) Material and methods: Patients over 18-years-old with a pediatric-onset sarcoidosis (≤15-year-old) who completed at least a three-year follow-up in French expert centers were included. Clinical information at presentation and outcome in adulthood were studied. (3) Results: A total of 52 patients were included (34 prospectively in childhood and 18 retrospectively in adulthood), with a mean age of 12 (±2.7) at diagnosis. The median duration time of follow-up was 11.5 years (range 3–44.5). Relapses mostly occurred during treatment decrease (84.5%), others within the three years after treatment interruption (9.1%), and rarely when the disease was stable for more than three years (6.4%). Sarcoidosis was severe in 11 (21.2%) in adulthood. Patients received a high corticosteroid cumulative dose (median 17,900 mg) for a median duration of five years (range 0–32), resulting in mostly mild (18; 35.3%) and rarely severe (2; 3.8%) adverse events. (4) Conclusions: Pediatric-onset sarcoidosis needed a long-term treatment in almost half of the patients. Around one fifth of pediatric-onset sarcoidosis patients had severe sarcoidosis consequences in adulthood.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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