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Clinical Features and Treatment Outcomes of Necrotizing Autoimmune Myopathy

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TLDR
Nemrotizing autoimmune myopathy was idiopathic in half of this cohort with clinical and histopathologically defined disease, and early aggressive immunosuppressant therapy improved outcomes, and risk of relapse was high during medication dose reduction or withdrawal.
Abstract
Importance Necrotizing autoimmune myopathy (NAM) is characterized pathologically by necrotic muscle fibers with absent or minimal inflammation. It is often accompanied by statin therapy, connective tissue diseases, cancer, and autoantibodies specific for signal recognition particle (SRP) or 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl–coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR). Data are limited concerning differences among etiologic subgroups and treatment outcomes in NAM. Objectives To describe the clinical, serologic, and electrophysiologic characteristics of NAM, compare patient subgroups, and determine clinical outcome predictors. Design, Setting, and Participants We conducted a retrospective review of medical records for 63 adult Mayo Clinic patients assigned the clinical and histopathologic diagnosis of NAM from January 1, 2004, through December 31, 2013. Patients were stratified by presumed cause and autoantibody status. Main Outcomes and Measures Clinical, electrophysiologic, and pathologic characteristics were collected and compared among patient subgroups. Predictors of response to treatment were identified by univariate logistic regression. Results Lower extremity weakness predominated (46 [73%]). Distal weakness (26 [41%]), dysphagia (22 [35%]), and dyspnea (23 [37%]) were common. Twenty-two patients (35%) were receiving a statin medication at onset, 6 had cancer, and 3 had a connective tissue disease. The median creatine kinase level was 5326 U/L. In 13 patients (24%), SRP-IgG was detected, and in 17 patients (34%), HMGCR-IgG was detected (one-third of whom had not received statin medication). One patient was dual seropositive. Facial weakness was more common in SRP-IgG–positive patients. Myotonic discharges were more common in statin-associated NAM. Prednisone monotherapy was insufficient to control disease in most patients; 30 (90%) of 32 patients required 2 or more immunotherapeutic agents. Relapse occurred in 16 (55%) of 29 patients during immunosuppressant taper or discontinuation. Predictors of favorable outcome were male sex and use of 2 or more immunotherapeutic agents within 3 months of onset. Conclusions and Relevance Necrotizing autoimmune myopathy was idiopathic in half of this cohort with clinical and histopathologically defined disease. In the remainder, NAM was associated with statin medication, cancer, or connective tissue disease. One in 4 patients was SRP-IgG positive, and 1 in 3 was HMGCR-IgG positive. The disease was usually not controlled by corticosteroid monotherapy. Presentation, course, and outcomes did not differ significantly in seropositive, seronegative, and statin-associated cases. Early aggressive immunosuppressant therapy improved outcomes, and risk of relapse was high during medication dose reduction or withdrawal.

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Journal ArticleDOI

224th ENMC International Workshop:: Clinico-sero-pathological classification of immune-mediated necrotizing myopathies Zandvoort, The Netherlands, 14-16 October 2016.

TL;DR: This work has shown clear trends in the classification of immune-mediated necrotizing myopathies using a probabilistic approach, and these trends are likely to increase in the coming years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statin-Associated Autoimmune Myopathy.

TL;DR: In a fraction of patients, an autoimmune myopathy may develop, characterized by the development of autoantibodies to the target enzyme, HMG-CoA reductase, which is associated with death from cardiovascular causes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical features and prognosis in anti-SRP and anti-HMGCR necrotising myopathy

TL;DR: Anti-SRP antibodies are associated with severe neurological symptoms, more so than are anti-HMGCR antibodies, although these autoantibodies are independent serological markers associated with IMNM.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diagnosis, Prevention, and Management of Statin Adverse Effects and Intolerance: Canadian Consensus Working Group Update (2016)

TL;DR: More detailed analyses of specific but more unusual adverse effects ascribed to statins are updated including evidence regarding new-onset diabetes, cognitive dysfunction, cataracts, and the rare but important immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy.
Journal ArticleDOI

More severe disease and slower recovery in younger patients with anti-3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase-associated autoimmune myopathy.

TL;DR: Although younger patients with anti-HMGCR myositis had more severe disease and a worse prognosis than older patients, they did not have evidence of a known co-existing muscular dystrophy to explain their persistent, and sometimes progressive, muscle weakness.
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TL;DR: In this paper, a different approach to problems of multiple significance testing is presented, which calls for controlling the expected proportion of falsely rejected hypotheses -the false discovery rate, which is equivalent to the FWER when all hypotheses are true but is smaller otherwise.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new approach to the classification of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy: myositis-specific autoantibodies define useful homogeneous patient groups.

TL;DR: Myositis-specific autoantibody status is a more useful guide than clinical group in assessing patients with myositis, and that specific associations of immunogenetics, immune responses, and clinical manifestations occur in IIM.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autoantibodies against 3‐hydroxy‐3‐methylglutaryl‐coenzyme A reductase in patients with statin‐associated autoimmune myopathy

TL;DR: Statins up-regulate the expression of HMGCR, the major target of autoantibodies in statin-associated IMNM, which may sustain the immune response even after statins are discontinued.
Journal ArticleDOI

A novel autoantibody recognizing 200‐kd and 100‐kd proteins is associated with an immune‐mediated necrotizing myopathy

TL;DR: An anti-200/100-kd specificity defines a subgroup of patients with necrotizing myopathy who previously were considered to be autoantibody negative and should be treated with immunosuppressive therapy.
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