OBJECTIVE: To determine the long-term outcome and associated clinical, serologic, and pathologic features in a cohort of patients with connective tissue disease (CTD) and the anti-signal recognition particle (anti-SRP) autoantibody. METHODS: Sera and clinical data were collected prospectively from consecutive adult patients with polymyositis (PM; n = 134), dermatomyositis (n = 129), or other CTDs (predominantly systemic sclerosis [SSc; n = 790]). Patients were first evaluated during 1973-2001. RESULTS: Nineteen patients with the anti-SRP autoantibody were identified, 16 (84%) of whom had pure PM and 3 (2 with SSc and 1 with antisynthetase syndrome) had yet to develop features of myositis after a mean followup of 4.5 years (range 2.5-6 years). More SRP-positive PM patients had severe proximal muscle weakness (50%) and muscle atrophy (67%) at initial presentation compared with antisynthetase-positive PM controls. Cardiac involvement occurred in only 2 of 16 SRP-positive PM patients (13%), and interstitial lung disease was noted in 3 of 13 SRP-positive PM patients (23%) and in the 3 SRP-positive nonmyositis patients. There was a relative lack of inflammation in muscle biopsy specimens from the SRP-positive PM cohort. Other autoantibodies in the SRP-positive patients included Ro/SSA (4 patients), Th/To (1 patient), and anti-PL-12 (1 patient). Survival in the SRP-positive PM patients was comparable with that seen in the cohort of SRP-negative PM patients. CONCLUSION: The anti-SRP autoantibody is not specific for PM. Severe muscle weakness and atrophy were prominent features in PM patients with anti-SRP. Cardiac involvement was less common and survival was better in patients with anti-SRP than has previously been reported.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the long-term outcome and associated clinical, serologic, and pathologic features in a cohort of patients with connective tissue disease (CTD) and the anti-signal recognition particle (anti-SRP) autoantibody. METHODS: Sera and clinical data were collected prospectively from consecutive adult patients with polymyositis (PM; n = 134), dermatomyositis (n = 129), or other CTDs (predominantly systemic sclerosis [SSc; n = 790]). Patients were first evaluated during 1973-2001. RESULTS: Nineteen patients with the anti-SRP autoantibody were identified, 16 (84%) of whom had pure PM and 3 (2 with SSc and 1 with antisynthetase syndrome) had yet to develop features of myositis after a mean followup of 4.5 years (range 2.5-6 years). More SRP-positive PM patients had severe proximal muscle weakness (50%) and muscle atrophy (67%) at initial presentation compared with antisynthetase-positive PM controls. Cardiac involvement occurred in only 2 of 16 SRP-positive PM patients (13%), and interstitial lung disease was noted in 3 of 13 SRP-positive PM patients (23%) and in the 3 SRP-positive nonmyositis patients. There was a relative lack of inflammation in muscle biopsy specimens from the SRP-positive PM cohort. Other autoantibodies in the SRP-positive patients included Ro/SSA (4 patients), Th/To (1 patient), and anti-PL-12 (1 patient). Survival in the SRP-positive PM patients was comparable with that seen in the cohort of SRP-negative PM patients. CONCLUSION: The anti-SRP autoantibody is not specific for PM. Severe muscle weakness and atrophy were prominent features in PM patients with anti-SRP. Cardiac involvement was less common and survival was better in patients with anti-SRP than has previously been reported.
Authors: Lesley Ann Saketkoo; Dana P Ascherman; Vincent Cottin; Lisa Christopher-Stine; Sonye K Danoff; Chester V Oddis Journal: Curr Rheumatol Rev Date: 2010-05
Authors: G J D Hengstman; L van Brenk; W T M Vree Egberts; E L van der Kooi; G F Borm; G W A M Padberg; W J van Venrooij; B G M van Engelen Journal: J Neurol Date: 2005-02-23 Impact factor: 4.849
Authors: Rohit Aggarwal; Andriy Bandos; Ann M Reed; Dana P Ascherman; Richard J Barohn; Brian M Feldman; Frederick W Miller; Lisa G Rider; Michael O Harris-Love; Marc C Levesque; Chester V Oddis Journal: Arthritis Rheumatol Date: 2014-03 Impact factor: 10.995