# Sex differences in clinical and imaging characteristics of axial juvenile spondyloarthritis

**Authors:** Adam S Mayer, Rui Xiao, Timothy G Brandon, Pamela F Weiss, Amita Aggarwal, Amita Aggarwal, Ruben Burgos-Vargas, Robert A Colbert, Gerd Horneff, Ronald M Laxer, Kirsten Minden, Angelo Ravelli, Nicolino Ruperto, Judith A Smith, Matthew L Stoll, Shirley M Tse, Filip Van den Bosch, Walter P Maksymowych, Robert G Lambert, David M Biko, Nancy A Chauvin, Michael L Francavilla, Jacob L Jaremko, Nele Herregods, Ozgur Kasapcopur, Mehmet Yildiz, Hemalatha Srinivasalu, Daniel J Lovell, Peter A Nigrovic, Ivan Foeldvari, Marisa S Klein-Gitelman, Seza Ozen, Ray Naden, Alison M Hendry, Rik Joos

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keaf611 · Rheumatology (Oxford, England) · 2026-03-03

## TL;DR

This study finds that males with axial juvenile spondyloarthritis show more inflammatory signs and MRI features compared to females at diagnosis.

## Contribution

The study identifies sex-based differences in clinical and MRI features at diagnosis in axial juvenile spondyloarthritis.

## Key findings

- Males had higher odds of inflammatory MRI lesions, bone marrow oedema, and pelvic enthesitis compared to females.
- Males showed greater HLA-B27 positivity and elevated inflammatory markers.
- No sex differences were observed in peripheral arthritis, enthesitis, or patient-reported outcomes.

## Abstract

The impact of biologic sex in axial juvenile spondyloarthritis (axJSpA) is unknown. We assessed whether biologic sex is associated with disease manifestations, patient-reported outcomes, or characteristic sacroiliac joint (SIJ) MRI lesions in a large cohort of youths with classified axJSpA.

This international multicentre cross-sectional study included youths aged <18 years with physician-diagnosed juvenile spondyloarthritis and fulfilling the classification criteria for axJSpA. Clinical and SIJ MRI data were available from the time axial disease was first diagnosed and were compared between males and females using Pearson’s chi-squared and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests, as appropriate. Multivariable logistic regression evaluated the association of sex with inflammatory and structural MRI lesions typical of axial disease.

Among the 143 patients included, 67.1% were male. Males had significantly greater HLA-B27 positivity, hip/groin stiffness and inflammatory marker elevation. There were no differences in peripheral arthritis, enthesitis or patient-reported outcomes. On SIJ MRI, males had significantly higher odds of unequivocal inflammatory lesions (OR 4.86, 95% CI 1.37–17.32), bone marrow oedema (OR 4.13, 95% CI 1.17–14.62) and pelvic enthesitis (OR 5.23, 95% CI 1.39–19.61) compared with females, but no differences in structural lesions were found.

In a large multicentre axJSpA cohort, males were significantly more likely to have clinical and MRI features of inflammatory sacroiliitis at the time axial disease was first diagnosed. Future trials in axJSpA should strongly consider stratification by sex in their design.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** HLA-B (major histocompatibility complex, class I, B) [NCBI Gene 3106] {aka AS, B-4901, HLAB}
- **Diseases:** enthesitis (MESH:D001171), inflammatory sacroiliitis (MESH:D058566), axJSpA (MESH:D000089183), peripheral arthritis (MESH:D001168), axial disease (MESH:C537791), bone marrow oedema (MESH:D004487), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), juvenile spondyloarthritis (MESH:D013167)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13007742/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13007742