| Literature DB >> 28663002 |
Sarah L Tansley1, Stefania Simou2, Gavin Shaddick3, Zoe E Betteridge4, Beverley Almeida5, Harsha Gunawardena6, Wendy Thomson7, Michael W Beresford8, Angela Midgley9, Francesco Muntoni10, Lucy R Wedderburn11, Neil J McHugh12.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Juvenile myositis is a rare and heterogeneous disease. Diagnosis is often difficult but early treatment is important in reducing the risk of associated morbidity and poor outcomes. Myositis specific autoantibodies have been described in both juvenile and adult patients with myositis and can be helpful in dividing patients into clinically homogenous groups. We aimed to explore the utility of myositis specific autoantibodies as diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in patients with juvenile-onset disease.Entities:
Keywords: Autoantibody; Autoimmune disease; Myopathy; Myositis; Paediatric rheumatology; Phenotype
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28663002 PMCID: PMC5656106 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaut.2017.06.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autoimmun ISSN: 0896-8411 Impact factor: 7.094
Fig. 1A flow chart describing the autoantibody detection process. a. Anti-HMGCR testing by ELISA was not performed on samples from the JIA cohort due to insufficient available serum.
Demographic and autoantibody data for the 793 children included in this study.
| Cohort (n) | Median age at onset (IQR) | Female n (%) | Autoantibody identifiable (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | MSA | MAA | |||
| Juvenile myositis (379) | 6.8 (3.9–10.1) | 267 | 225 (59) | 185 (49) | 40 (11) |
| JDM (316) | 6.3 (3.7–10.0) | 218 (69) | 187 (59) | 174 (55) | 13 (4) |
| JPM (6) | 12.0 (11.4–13.5) | 4 (67) | 6 (100) | 5 (83) | 1 (17) |
| Overlap CTD or MCTD (49) | 9.0 (6.7–11.7) | 40 (83) | 31 (63) | 6 (12) | 25 (51) |
| Other IIM | 8.9 (3.1–12.8) | 7 (58) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| JIA (318 | 6.3 (2.8–10.4) | 203 (63) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| JSLE (21) | 16.3 (14.4–16.7) | 17 (81) | 8 (38) | 0 | 8 (38) |
| Muscular dystrophy | 9 (7.5–14) | 2 (7.4) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Healthy controls (48) | 13.4 (10.9–14.8) | 25 (52) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
IQR; interquartile range MSA; myositis specific autoantibody MAA; myositis associated autoantibody JDM′ juvenile dermatomyositis JPM; juvenile polymyositis CTD; connective tissue disease MCTD; mixed connective tissue disease JIA; juvenile idiopathic arthritis JSLE; juvenile-onset systemic lupus erythematosus.
380 patients screened and one patient with anti-TIF1γ and anti-U1RNP excluded from further analysis.
2 focal myositis, 2 brothers with CANDLE syndrome, 2 viral/post-infective myositis, 1 C1q deficiency infantile lupus, 1 ‘inflammatory myopathy and panniculitis’.
16 systemic, 164 oligoarticular, 8 rheumatoid factor positive polyarthritis, 78 rheumatoid factor negative polyarthritis, 22 psoriatic arthritis, 15 enthesitis related arthritis, 7 undifferentiated, 8 missing data.
All anti-U1RNP.
20 Duchenne muscular dystrophy, 5 Becker muscular dystrophy and 2 Limb Girdle muscle dystrophy type 2D.
Fig. 2The prevalence of myositis specific and associated autoantibodies in the juvenile-onset myositis cohort (n = 379). An autoantibody was identified in 225 patients (59%). The most common autoantibody subgroups were anti-TIF1γ (18%), anti-NXP2 (15%) and anti-MDA5 (6%). Alternative autoantibodies were collectively identified in the remaining 20%. Nil identified; No known autoantibody identified using the techniques described (42% of this group have unidentified bands visible on immunoprecipitation). Other; 1 each of anti-Ro60, anti-Ku, anti-Scl70, anti-Mitochondrial antibody and anti-U3RNP. Anti-synthetase; 3 patients with anti-Jo-1, 2 anti-PL12 and 1 anti-PL7.
Fig. 3The median age at disease onset for patients with juvenile-onset myositis was 6.9 years. As illustrated, the median age at disease onset varied between autoantibody subgroups. Anti-U1RNP, anti-synthetase and ‘other’ myositis associated autoantibodies were all more likely to be identified in older patients. ASS; anti-synthetase (3 patients with anti-Jo-1, 2 anti-PL12 and 1 anti-PL7) other; 1 anti-Ku, 1 anti-SCl70, 1 anti-Ro60, 1 anti-U3RNP, 1 anti-Mitochondrial antibody. None identified; No known autoantibody identified using the techniques described (42% of this group have unidentified bands visible on immunoprecipitation).
The association of key clinical disease features with autoantibody subgroups.
| Classified as PM (%) | Dysphagia | Calcinosis | Ulceration | Oedema | Lipoatrophy | Arthritis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total cohort (n = 379) | 10 (2.6) | 96 (26) | 120 (32) | 76 (20) | 155 (41) | 57 (15) | 148 (40) |
| Anti-TIF1γ | 0 | 18 (26) | 25 (37) | 32 (47) | 13 (19) | 26 (38) | |
| Anti-NXP2 | 0 | 17 (29) | 25 (43) | 8 (14) | 26 (44) | 9 (16) | 20 (34) |
| Anti-MDA5 | 0 | 7 (30) | 7 (27) | 10 (43) | 3 (13) | ||
| Anti-PmScl | 0 | 5 (25) | 4 (20) | 5 (25) | 11 (44) | ||
| Anti- Mi2 | 0 | 4 (27) | 0 | 2 (13) | 6 (40) | ||
| Anti-U1RNP | 6 (43) | 1 (8) | 2 (14) | 2 (14) | 2 (14) | 7 (50) | |
| Anti-SRP | 3 (43) | 1 (14) | 5 (71) | 1 (13) | 2 (29) | ||
| Anti-synthetase | 0 | 0 | 1 (17) | 2 (33) | 3 (50) | 2 (33) | |
| Anti-HMGCR | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Anti-SAE | 0 | 0 | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 1 (33) | 2 (66) |
| Other | 3 (60) | 1 (20) | 2 (50) | 1 (20) | 2 (50) | 3 (60) | |
| Nil identified | 2 (1) | 27 (17) | 44 (28) | 19 (12) | 59 (38) | 16 (10) | 54 (35) |
Statistically significant associations are highlighted in bold.
*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, PM; polymyositis.
Data available for 374 patients.
Including 8 patients with other idiopathic inflammatory myopathy.
3 patients anti-Jo-1, 2 patients anti-PL12 and 1 patient anti-PL7.
1 anti-Ku, 1 anti-Scl70, 1 anti-Ro60, 1 anti-U3RNP, 1 anti-mitochondrial antibody.
No known autoantibody identified using the techniques described (42% of this group have unidentified bands visible on immunoprecipitation).
The association of key clinical outcome measures with autoantibody subgroups.
| Lowest ever CMAS | Highest ever PGA | Ever received biologic drug (%) | Ever received IV cyclophosphamide (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total cohort (n = 379) | 40 (24.5–47.5) | 4 (2.2–7.0) | 77 (20) | 89 (23) |
| Anti-TIF1γ | 5.2 (2.6–7.6) | |||
| Anti-NXP2 | 4.6 (2.7–6.9) | 11 (19) | 10 (17) | |
| Anti-MDA5 | 4.1 (3.1–6.7) | 1 (4) | 6 (26) | |
| Anti-PmScl | 45.5 (22–49) | 3 (1.5–6.9) | 3 (15) | 5 (25) |
| Anti- Mi2 | 4.8 (2.45–7) | 1 (7) | 3 (20) | |
| Anti-U1RNP | 3.4 (1–5.2) | 2 (14) | 1 (7) | |
| Anti-SRP | 6.6 (3.5–6.9) | 2 (29) | 2 (29) | |
| Anti-synthetase | 44.5 (41–48) | 3.3 (2.4–5.5) | 1 (17) | 2 (33) |
| Anti-HMGCR | 6.6 (4.4–8.6) | 4 (100) | 2 (50) | |
| Anti-SAE | 39 (23–47) | 3.5 (2–7) | 0 | 0 |
| Other | 4.1 (2.3–7) | 2 (40) | 1 (20) | |
| Nil identified | 43 (27–48) | 3.2 (2.0–6.0) | 28 (18) | 32 (21) |
Statistically significant associations are highlighted in bold.
*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, PM; polymyositis.
CMAS; Childhood Myositis Assessment Score, PGA; Physician Global Assessment of disease activity.
Data available for 355 patients.
Data available for 370 patients.
Including 8 patients with other idiopathic inflammatory myopathy.
3 patients anti-Jo-1, 2 patients anti-PL12 and 1 patient anti-PL7.
1 anti-Ku, 1 anti-Scl70, 1 anti-Ro60, 1 anti-U3RNP, 1 anti-mitochondrial antibody.
No known autoantibody identified using the techniques described (42% of this group have unidentified bands visible on immunoprecipitation).
Fig. 4The proportion of myositis patients within each autoantibody defined subgroup who received treatment with intravenous cyclophosphamide (dark grey) and/or a biologic drug (light grey) is shown.