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Meta-Analysis
. 2023 Feb 1;62(2):512-522.
doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac443.

Clinical and therapeutic diversity in adult chronic nonbacterial osteomyelitis (CNO) of the sternocostoclavicular region: a meta-analysis

Affiliations
Meta-Analysis

Clinical and therapeutic diversity in adult chronic nonbacterial osteomyelitis (CNO) of the sternocostoclavicular region: a meta-analysis

Anne T Leerling et al. Rheumatology (Oxford). .

Abstract

Objectives: Chronic nonbacterial osteomyelitis (CNO) is a rare inflammatory bone disease. The distinct CNO subtype that affects the anterior chest wall is descriptively named sternocostoclavicular hyperostosis (SCCH) and mainly occurs in adults. Literature on CNO/SCCH is scattered and lacks diagnostic and therapeutic consensus.

Methods: Systematic review and meta-analysis aiming to characterize clinical presentation and therapeutic modalities applied in adult CNO/SCCH patients. Untransformed numerical data and double-arcsine transformed proportional data were pooled in a random effects model in R-4.0.5; proportions were reported with 95% CI.

Results: Forty studies were included, containing data on 2030 and 642 patients for aim 1 and 2, respectively. A female predisposition (67%, 95% CI 60, 73) and major diagnostic delay (5 years 95% CI 3, 7) were noted. Clinical presentation included chest pain (89%, 95% CI 79, 96) and swelling (79%, 95% CI 62, 91). Patients suffered from pustulosis palmoplantaris (53%, 95% CI 37, 68), arthritis (24%, 95% CI 11, 39) and acne (8%, 95% CI 4, 13). Inflammatory markers were inconsistently elevated. Autoantibody and HLA-B27 prevalence was normal, and histopathology unspecific. Increased isotope uptake (99%, 95% CI 96, 100) was a consistent imaging finding. Among manifold treatments, pamidronate and biologicals yielded good response in 83%, 95% CI 60, 98 and 56%, 95% CI 26, 85, respectively.

Conclusion: CNO/SCCH literature proves heterogeneous regarding diagnostics and treatment. Timely diagnosis is challenging and mainly follows from increased isotope uptake on nuclear examination. Biopsies, autoantibodies and HLA status are non-contributory, and biochemical inflammation only variably detected. Based on reported data, bisphosphonates and biologicals seem reasonably effective, but due to limitations in design and heterogeneity between studies the precise magnitude of their effect is uncertain. Fundamentally, international consensus seems imperative to advance clinical care for CNO/SCCH.

Keywords: SAPHO; Sternocostoclavicular hyperostosis; adults; biologicals; bisphosphonates; chronic non-bacterial osteomyelitis; diagnostics; pustulotic arthro-osteitis; treatment.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Overview of study selection Forty studies were included for the final analyses: 20 for aim 1 (clinical presentation), 12 for aim 2 (treatment modalities and response) and eight for both.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Treatment modalities applied in CNO/SCCH and pooled response rates (cohort and intervention trials combined) Bisphosphonates, steroids and biologicals appear most effective. TNFi: TNF-α inhibitors.

References

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Supplementary concepts