TY - JOUR
T1 - Multimodality Screening For (Peri)Myocarditis In Newly Diagnosed Idiopathic Inflammatory Myopathies
T2 - A Cross-Sectional Study
AU - Lim, Johan
AU - Walter, Hannah A. W.
AU - de Bruin-Bon, Rianne A. C. M.
AU - Jarings, Myrthe C.
AU - Planken, R. Nils
AU - Kok, Wouter E. M.
AU - Raaphorst, Joost
AU - Pinto, Yigal M.
AU - Amin, Ahmad S.
AU - Boekholdt, S. Matthijs
AU - van der Kooi, Anneke J.
N1 - Funding Information: ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INCLUDING SOURCES OF SUPPORT We thank Ms. A. Langerak for her help in diagnosing and monitoring the included patients. We thank Dr. H.J. Huijgen for his help with performing the hs-TnI analyses. Several authors of this publication are members of the Netherlands Neuromuscular Centre (NL-NMD), the European Reference Network for rare neuromuscular diseases EURO-NMD, and the Dutch Myositis Network. Publisher Copyright: © 2023 - The authors. Published by IOS Press.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - BACKGROUND: Cardiac involvement in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM or "myositis") is associated with an approximate 4% mortality, but standardised screening strategies are lacking. OBJECTIVE: We explored a multimodality screening on potentially reversible cardiac involvement -i.e. active (peri)myocarditis -in newly diagnosed IIM. METHODS: We included adult IIM patients from 2017 to 2020. At time of diagnosis, patients underwent cardiac evaluation including laboratory biomarkers, electrocardiography, echocardiography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR). Based on 2019 consensus criteria for myocarditis, an adjudication committee made diagnoses of definite, probable, possible or no (peri)myocarditis. We explored diagnostic values of sequentially added diagnostic modalities by Constructing Classification and Regression Tree (CART) analysis in patients with definite/probable versus no (peri)myocarditis. RESULTS: We included 34 IIM patients, in whom diagnoses of definite (six, 18%), probable (two, 6%), possible (11, 32%), or no (peri)myocarditis (15, 44%) were adjudicated. CART-analysis showed high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (cut-off value < 2.3 times the upper limit of normal (xULN)) ruled out (peri)myocarditis with a sensitivity of 88%, while high-sensitivity troponin I (cut-off value > 2.9 xULN for females and > 1.8 xULN for males) ruled in (peri)myocarditis with a specificity of 100%. Applying high-sensitivity cardiac troponins with these cut-off values in a diagnostic algorithm without and with a CMR to the total population of 34 patients demonstrated a diagnostic accuracy for a clear diagnosis of probable/definite or no (peri)myocarditis of 59% and 68%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: A diagnostic algorithm for detection of (peri)myocarditis in adult IIM may consist of sequential testing with high-sensitivity cardiac troponins and CMR.
AB - BACKGROUND: Cardiac involvement in idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM or "myositis") is associated with an approximate 4% mortality, but standardised screening strategies are lacking. OBJECTIVE: We explored a multimodality screening on potentially reversible cardiac involvement -i.e. active (peri)myocarditis -in newly diagnosed IIM. METHODS: We included adult IIM patients from 2017 to 2020. At time of diagnosis, patients underwent cardiac evaluation including laboratory biomarkers, electrocardiography, echocardiography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR). Based on 2019 consensus criteria for myocarditis, an adjudication committee made diagnoses of definite, probable, possible or no (peri)myocarditis. We explored diagnostic values of sequentially added diagnostic modalities by Constructing Classification and Regression Tree (CART) analysis in patients with definite/probable versus no (peri)myocarditis. RESULTS: We included 34 IIM patients, in whom diagnoses of definite (six, 18%), probable (two, 6%), possible (11, 32%), or no (peri)myocarditis (15, 44%) were adjudicated. CART-analysis showed high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (cut-off value < 2.3 times the upper limit of normal (xULN)) ruled out (peri)myocarditis with a sensitivity of 88%, while high-sensitivity troponin I (cut-off value > 2.9 xULN for females and > 1.8 xULN for males) ruled in (peri)myocarditis with a specificity of 100%. Applying high-sensitivity cardiac troponins with these cut-off values in a diagnostic algorithm without and with a CMR to the total population of 34 patients demonstrated a diagnostic accuracy for a clear diagnosis of probable/definite or no (peri)myocarditis of 59% and 68%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: A diagnostic algorithm for detection of (peri)myocarditis in adult IIM may consist of sequential testing with high-sensitivity cardiac troponins and CMR.
KW - Neuromuscular diseases
KW - heart diseases
KW - muscular diseases
KW - myositis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150079541&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.3233/JND-221582
DO - https://doi.org/10.3233/JND-221582
M3 - Article
C2 - 36683515
SN - 0960-8966
VL - 10
SP - 185
EP - 197
JO - Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases
JF - Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases
IS - 2
ER -