Abstract

PurposeSporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM) is an autoimmune degenerative disease of the muscle, with inflammatory infiltrates and inclusion vacuoles. Its pathogenesis is not fully understood and the diagnosis is hampered by its imprecise characteristics, at times indistinguishable from other idiopathic inflammatory myopathies such as polymyositis and dermatomyositis. The diagnosis may be assisted by the detection of autoantibodies targeting Mup44, a skeletal muscle antigen identified as cytosolic 5′-nucleotidase 1A (cN-1A, NT5C1A). A novel standardized anti-cN-1A IgG ELISA was developed and its diagnostic performance was evaluated by two reference laboratories.MethodsRecombinant human full-length cN-1A was expressed and purified, and subsequently utilized to set up a standardized ELISA. To evaluate the novel assay, laboratory A examined sera from North American patients with clinically and pathologically diagnosed definite sIBM (n = 17), suspected sIBM (n = 14), myositis controls (n = 110), non-myositis autoimmune controls (n = 93) and healthy subjects (n = 52). Laboratory B analyzed a Dutch cohort of definite sIBM patients (n = 51) and healthy controls (n = 202).ResultsAnti-cN-1A reactivity was most frequent in definite sIBM (39.2–47.1%), but absent in biopsy-proven classic polymyositis or dermatomyositis. Overall diagnostic sensitivity and specificity amounted to 35.5 and 96.1% (laboratory A) and 39.2 and 96.5% (laboratory B).ConclusionsAnti-cN-1A autoantibodies were detected by ELISA with moderate sensitivity, but high specificity for sIBM and may therefore help diagnose this infrequent and difficult-to-diagnose myopathy. The novel anti-cN-1A IgG ELISA can improve and accelerate the diagnosis of sIBM using sera where muscle biopsy is delayed or unfeasible.

Highlights

  • Sporadic inclusion body myositis is the most common acquired myopathy in patients over 50 years old [1, 2]. sIBM has a male predominance and a prevalence of 1–71 people per million individuals, rising up to 139 per million among people aged above 50 years and varying between different populations [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

  • Its pathogenesis is not fully understood and the diagnosis is hampered by its imprecise characteristics, at times indistinguishable from other idiopathic inflammatory myopathies such as polymyositis and dermatomyositis

  • SIBM is classified as an idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM), along with polymyositis, dermatomyositis and immune-mediated necrotizing myopathies [14]

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Summary

Introduction

Sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM) is the most common acquired myopathy in patients over 50 years old [1, 2]. sIBM has a male predominance and a prevalence of 1–71 people per million individuals, rising up to 139 per million among people aged above 50 years and varying between different populations [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. T cells), myofiber MHC class I and II upregulation, rimmed vacuoles, congophilic inclusions, sarcoplasmic protein aggregates (e.g., amyloid-b, p62, TDP-43) and mitochondrial abnormalities (e.g., cytochrome c oxidase negative myofibers) [15, 18, 19]. Due to their patchy distribution and absence in early disease stages, some of these histological markers are not detectable in up to 30% of patients with clinically typical sIBM, causing diagnostic difficulty and delay [2, 20,21,22]

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