Seronegative IMNM: a subgroup with distinctive features from seropositive IMNM

A majority of patients with immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM)—a relatively new entity within the spectrum of idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs)—suffer from disability despite treatment, indicating inadequate management. Here, the authors conducted a cross-sectional study to investigate clinical and serologic characteristics in a case series of IMNM, including seronegative IMNM, diagnosed in tertiary referral hospitals in The Netherlands and Belgium. Seventeen patients had anti-3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR) autoantibodies (Abs), of whom 11 had a history of statin use, 15 had anti-signal recognition particle (SRP) Abs, 2 had anti-melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 (MDA5) Abs, 22 patients were seronegative, and 9 patients did not have a complete Ab assessment. Moderate to severe disability in HMGCR Ab-positive and anti-SRP Ab-positive IMNM was common (71% and 60%, respectively) despite multimodality treatment. Compared with statin-associated anti-HMGCR Ab-positive IMNM, statin-naive anti-HMGCR Ab-positive IMNM patients were more often men (67% vs 45%), had lower rates of dysphagia (17% vs 45%), and more frequently had third-line therapy (50% vs 9%) and poor to fatal outcome (50% vs 0%). Compared with seropositive IMNM, seronegative IMNM was characterized by female predominance (1:3), frequent occurrence of associated connective tissue disorders (22% vs 9%), and significantly higher rates of extramuscular disease activity (50% vs 16%, p 0.014; 2-sided Fisher exact), also after excluding patients with an associated connective tissue disease (35% vs 7%, p 0.038; 2-sided Fisher exact).

 

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Lim J, Rietveld A, De Bleecker JL, et al. Seronegative patients form a distinctive subgroup of immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy. Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm. 2018;6(1):e513.