Therapeutic Advances in Musculoskeletal Disease (May 2024)

Effectiveness and safety of immunoadsorption as a rescue treatment of inflammatory myopathies: report of three cases and literature review

  • Jasper F. Nies,
  • Claudia Hendrix,
  • Malte P. Bartram,
  • Ryan Spear,
  • Henning Hagmann,
  • Thomas Benzing,
  • Torsten Kubacki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1759720X241250238
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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Idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM) summarizes rare, systemic autoimmune conditions primarily characterized by inflammatory damage to the skeletal muscle. Although primary damage occurs to the muscle, these IIM-related conditions involve other organs, including the skin, lungs, upper gastrointestinal tract, joints, and heart. While many patients have an adequate response to immunosuppressive treatment, some patients develop rapidly progressive and treatment-resistant life-threatening courses. Treatment-resistant IIM is challenging for the treating physician and requires interdisciplinary and individualized treatment approaches. Extracorporeal therapy is one option for rescue therapy, with immunoadsorption (IA) having proven more effective than plasma exchange regarding the removal of circulating antibodies. Despite its efficacy and desirable safety profile, the clinical value of IA use in IIM is understudied with no controlled trials reported. Here, we present a review of the current knowledge regarding the management of treatment-resistant IIM and the cases of three patients with treatment-resistant IIM (two with dermatomyositis and one with immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy) who have successfully been treated with IA. All patients responded well to the therapy and experienced no IA-related complications. Taken together, we found IA to be a safe and effective treatment option in treatment-resistant IIM.