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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The IIM are a heterogeneous group of systemic rheumatic diseases which share the common features of chronic muscle weakness and mononuclear cell infiltrates in muscle. A number of classification schemes have been proposed for them, but none takes into consideration the marked immunologic, clinical, and genetic heterogeneity of the various clinical groups. We compared the usefulness of myositis-specific autoantibodies (anti-aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, anti-SRP, anti-Mi-2 and anti-MAS) to the standard clinical categories (polymyositis, dermatomyositis, overlap myositis, cancer-associated myositis, and inclusion body myositis) in predicting clinical signs and symptoms, HLA types, and prognosis in 212 adult IIM patients. Although patients with inclusion body myositis (n = 26) differed in having significantly more asymmetric and distal weakness, falling, and atrophy than other patients, there were few other significant differences among the other clinical groups. In contrast, autoantibody status defined distinct sets of patients and each patient had only 1 myositis-specific autoantibody. Patients with anti-amino-acyl-tRNA synthetase autoantibodies (n = 47), compared to those without these antibodies, had significantly more frequent arthritis, fever, interstitial lung disease, and "mechanic's hands"; HLA-DRw52; higher mean prednisone dose at survey, higher proportion of patients receiving cytotoxic drugs, and higher death rates. Those with anti-signal recognition particle antibodies (n = 7) had increased palpitations; myalgias; DR5, DRw52; severe, refractory disease; and higher death rates. Patients with anti-Mi-2 antibodies (n = 10) had increased "V-sign" and "shawl-sign" rashes, and cuticular overgrowth; DR7 and DRw53; and a good response to therapy. The 2 patients with anti-MAS antibodies were the only ones with alcoholic rhabdomyolysis preceding myositis; both had insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and both had HLA-B60, -C3, -DR4, and -DRw53. These findings suggest that 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. Thus the myositis-specific autoantibodies aid in interpreting the diverse symptoms and signs of myositis patients and in predicting their clinical course and prognosis. We propose, therefore, that an adjunct classification of the IIM, based on the myositis-specific autoantibody status, be incorporated into future studies of their epidemiology, etiology, and therapy.
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PMID:A new approach to the classification of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy: myositis-specific autoantibodies define useful homogeneous patient groups. 165 47

The idiopathic inflammatory myopathies are characterized by chronic muscle inflammation and involvement of internal organs, which contribute considerably to the morbidity and mortality of the disease. We conducted the current study to determine the survival data for patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies according to the presence of extramuscular clinical manifestations. We also determined the cumulative survival probability and the long-term prognosis and analyzed the causes of death at a single clinical immunology center.A survival analysis was performed using data for 162 patients diagnosed between 1976 and 1997 according to Bohan and Peter's criteria. Patients were followed up for a minimum of 5 years (median, 101.5 mo) or to date of death. Cumulative survival probability was calculated by the Kaplan-Meier method. The influence of extraskeletal and extramuscular involvement was analyzed as prognostic factors for death by Cox proportional hazards survival model. Eighteen disease-specific deaths occurred; pulmonary and cardiac complications were the most frequent causes of death. Global survival rates were 95%, 92%, and 89% for 1, 5, and 10 years, respectively. Analysis for clinicopathologic subgroups revealed that cancer-associated myositis had the worst prognosis, while juvenile and overlap myositis had the best prognosis. Five- and 10-year survival rates were 94.2% and 89.4% for patients with primary polymyositis and 90.1% and 86.4% for primary dermatomyositis patients, respectively. In the whole group of patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathy, cardiac (p < 0.01) and respiratory muscle involvement (p = 0.045) were significant prognostic factors for death. In the group of patients with primary polymyositis/dermatomyositis, cardiac involvement was the main prognostic factor for death (p < 0.01). Myositis patients described in this study have higher survival rates than reported previously worldwide. We examine the reasons for the differences between the data in the current study and the available survival data in the relevant literature.
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PMID:Long-term survival of patients with idiopathic inflammatory myopathies according to clinical features: a longitudinal study of 162 cases. 1474 66

The patient is a 56-year-old Japanese woman who suffered from breast cancer and ovarian cancer at intervals of 6 years, and was also complicated by two episodes of dermatomyositis, each of which occurred simultaneously with each of two cancers. When she was 51 years old, she developed dermatomyositis for the first time 6 months after the resection of breast cancer, whose histological type was tubular adenocarcinoma. The dermatomyositis remitted without oral corticosteroids in 2 months, and the remission had continued for 6 years. However, at the age of 56, dermatomyositis abruptly recurred with a pruritic generalized rash, Gottron's papules and elevated serum CK levels. Examination for malignancy revealed an ovarian tumor, which was diagnosed as serous papillaly adenocarcinoma, and the surgery was performed. After the resection of the ovarian cancer, skin rash was improved dramatically and CK levels were normalized again without oral corticosteroids. Since there were no evidences of recurrence of the breast cancer, it was considered that each episode of dermatomyositis was associated with each of the cancers, respectively. We report this rare and interesting case to consider the etiology of cancer-associated myositis as a paraneoplastic syndrome, since the two cancers have different histological types.
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PMID:[A case of dermatomyositis associated with different types of cancers at intervals of six years]. 1567 98

Unique autoantibody specificities are strongly associated with distinct clinical phenotypes, making autoantibodies useful for diagnosis and prognosis. To investigate the mechanisms underlying this striking association, we examined autoantigen expression in normal muscle and in muscle from patients with autoimmune myositis. Although myositis autoantigens are expressed at very low levels in control muscle, they are found at high levels in myositis muscle. Furthermore, increased autoantigen expression correlates with differentiation state, such that myositis autoantigen expression is increased in cells that have features of regenerating muscle cells. Consistent with this, we found that cultured myoblasts express high levels of autoantigens, which are strikingly down-regulated as cells differentiate into myotubes in vitro. These data strongly implicate regenerating muscle cells rather than mature myotubes as the source of ongoing antigen supply in autoimmune myositis. Myositis autoantigen expression is also markedly increased in several cancers known to be associated with autoimmune myositis, but not in their related normal tissues, demonstrating that tumor cells and undifferentiated myoblasts are antigenically similar. We propose that in cancer-associated myositis, an autoimmune response directed against cancer cross-reacts with regenerating muscle cells, enabling a feed-forward loop of tissue damage and antigen selection. Regulating pathways of antigen expression may provide unrecognized therapeutic opportunities in autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Enhanced autoantigen expression in regenerating muscle cells in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy. 1572 37

Idiopathic inflammatory myositis is characterized by progressive weakness of the proximal muscles. There is a higher risk of malignancy than in the normal population. The aim of this study was to evaluate the frequency of malignancy among 251 myositis patients. We also compared clinical and immunological characteristics of cancer-associated myositis with primary myositis. There were no malignancies among polymyositis, overlap, or juvenile myositis patients. Twenty-two of ninety dermatomyositis patients also had a malignant disease. Patients with cancer-associated dermatomyositis were significantly older than primary myositis patients and had more severe cutaneous and muscle symptoms. Dysphagia and diaphragmatic involvement were more frequent among cancer-associated patients, while extramuscular features were less frequent. After successful treatment of the malignancy, we were able to manage myositis symptoms. One-year survival rate was significantly better in primary dermatomyositis patients. The subset of cancer-associated myositis differs from primary myositis in many aspects of its clinical and immunological features. Prognosis and life expectancy in cancer-associated myositis patients is determined by the underlying malignant disease. Therefore, age- and sex-specific examinations for detection of an underlying malignancy are important in the management of patients with dermatomyositis.
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PMID:Cancer-associated myositis: clinical features and prognostic signs. 1612 45

A 37-year-old woman with severe interstitial lung disease associated with dermatomyositis sine myositis is reported. A thoracoscopic lung biopsy revealed organizing diffuse alveolar damage. Significantly elevated serum levels of the tumor markers CA 15-3 and CASA (cancer-associated serum antigen) were detected, but no evidence of an underlying malignancy (including breast and ovarian) was found on serial clinical and radiologic examinations. These levels gradually normalized as the interstitial lung disease responded to a combination of cyclophosphamide and corticosteroids. The use of the CA 15-3 and CASA assays to measure serum levels of the highly glycosylated, high-molecular-weight mucin MUC1 in interstitial lung disease has not been previously described. Clinicians should therefore be aware that elevation of these tumor markers may reflect the presence of interstitial lung disease rather than an underlying malignancy in patients with dermatomyositis, especially if the levels normalize after successful treatment of the lung disease.
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PMID:Transient elevation of the tumor markers CA 15-3 and CASA as markers of interstitial lung disease rather than underlying malignancy in dermatomyositis sine myositis. 1704 61

We describe 3 patients with inflammatory myositis in association with a neoplasm whose serum also contained anti-Jo1 antibodies, one of which presented characteristic features of the antisynthetase syndrome. No patient had a rash, and muscle biopsy was suggestive of polymyositis in all 3. Immunohistochemistry confirmed the diagnosis of polymyositis in the single patient with sufficient tissue available. Our patients remind us that the presence of antisynthetase antibodies (and even antisynthetase syndrome) in a patient with inflammatory myositis does not preclude the diagnosis of cancer-associated myositis.
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PMID:Cancer-associated myositis in the presence of anti-Jo1 autoantibodies and the antisynthetase syndrome. 1817 90

Dermatomyositis is an idiopathic inflammatory myopathy that affects skeletal muscle and the skin. Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies are characterized by the production of autoantibodies directed against different cell structures. Some of these autoantibodies are specific to idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (myositis-specific antibodies) whereas others are found in a range of overlap syndromes (myositis-associated antibodies). Although they are all associated with certain clinical and physiopathological characteristics of myositis, myositis-specific antibodies are essentially the most useful markers for clinical diagnosis, classification, and prognosis in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies. In recent years, two new myositis-specific antibodies in clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis (CADM), CADM-140 and, in cancer-associated dermatomyositis, anti-p155/p140 have been identified. This is of great importance as no myositis-specific antibodies had previously been detected in these clinical subgroups. The identification of target antigens that are recognized by these antibodies is essential for a better understanding of the pathogenesis of these diseases.
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PMID:[New autoantibodies in dermatomyositis]. 1945 3

In part 1 of this review, we examined the evidence behind the association between idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) and cancers. In view of the well-recognized association between cancer and myositis (hence the term cancer-associated myositis, or CAM), clinicians responsible for the management of patients with myositis must make important decisions regarding how intensively they undertake searches for malignancy. Clinicians must also decide how often such searches are repeated, and again how intensively, to optimize both cancer detection and treatment, and thus patient survival. As the risks of CAM are greatest in dermatomyositis, this is an issue of obvious importance to dermatologists. In this second of two reviews, we examine the role of autoantibodies as potential predictors of cancer risk in patients with IIM.
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PMID:Defining cancer risk in dermatomyositis. Part II. Assessing diagnostic usefulness of myositis serology. 1950 76

The idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs) comprise polymyositis, myositis overlapping with another connective tissue disease, dermatomyositis (DM) and inclusion-body myositis (IBM). IIMs are characterized by the presence of proximal muscle weakness, increased levels of muscle-specific enzymes, specific electromyographic abnormalities, and the presence of inflammatory cell infiltrates in skeletal muscle. Clinical, serological and histological criteria can be used to define individual IIM subtypes. In the first of this two-part review series, we examine the evidence for the existence of cancer-associated myositis (CAM), and in part 2, we discuss recent discoveries that provide insight into identification of patients with DM, who may be most at risk of developing CAM.
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PMID:Defining cancer risk in dermatomyositis. Part I. 1952 81


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