BACKGROUND: Kawasaki disease is an acute vasculitis of childhood
that leads to coronary artery aneurysms in ≈25% of untreated cases. It
has been reported worldwide and is the leading cause of acquired heart
disease in children in developed countries.
METHODS AND RESULTS: To revise the previous American Heart
Association guidelines, a multidisciplinary writing group of experts was
convened to review and appraise available evidence and practice-based
opinion, as well as to provide updated recommendations for diagnosis,
treatment of the acute illness, and long-term management. Although the
cause remains unknown, discussion sections highlight new insights into the
epidemiology, genetics, pathogenesis, pathology, natural history, and longterm
outcomes. Prompt diagnosis is essential, and an updated algorithm
defines supplemental information to be used to assist the diagnosis when
classic clinical criteria are incomplete. Although intravenous immune
globulin is the mainstay of initial treatment, the role for additional primary
therapy in selected patients is discussed. Approximately 10% to 20%
of patients do not respond to initial intravenous immune globulin, and
recommendations for additional therapies are provided. Careful initial
management of evolving coronary artery abnormalities is essential,
necessitating an increased frequency of assessments and escalation of
thromboprophylaxis. Risk stratification for long-term management is based
primarily on maximal coronary artery luminal dimensions, normalized as
Z scores, and is calibrated to both past and current involvement. Patients
with aneurysms require life-long and uninterrupted cardiology follow-up.
CONCLUSIONS: These recommendations provide updated and best
evidence-based guidance to healthcare providers who diagnose and
manage Kawasaki disease, but clinical decision making should be
individualized to specific patient circumstances.
Circulation. 2017;135:00–00
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