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"Danoff, Sonye"
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Thigh muscle MRI in immune-mediated necrotising myopathy: extensive oedema, early muscle damage and role of anti-SRP autoantibodies as a marker of severity
2017
ObjectivesThe aims of this study were to define the pattern of muscle involvement in patients with immune-mediated necrotising myopathy (IMNM) relative to those with other inflammatory myopathies and to compare patients with IMNM with different autoantibodies.MethodsAll Johns Hopkins Myositis Longitudinal Cohort subjects with a thigh MRI (tMRI) who fulfilled criteria for IMNM, dermatomyositis (DM), polymyositis (PM), inclusion body myositis (IBM) or clinically amyopathic DM (CADM) were included in the study. Muscles were assessed for intramuscular and fascial oedema, atrophy and fatty replacement. Disease subgroups were compared using univariate and multivariate analyses. Patients with IMNM with anti-signal recognition particle (SRP) autoantibodies were compared with those with IMNM with anti-HMG-CoA reductase (HMGCR) autoantibodies.ResultsThe study included 666 subjects (101 IMNM, 176 PM, 219 DM, 17 CADM and 153 IBM). Compared with DM or PM, IMNM was characterised by a higher proportion of thigh muscles with oedema, atrophy and fatty replacement (p<0.01). Patients with IMNM with anti-SRP had more atrophy (19%, p=0.003) and fatty replacement (18%, p=0.04) than those with anti-HMGCR. In IMNM, muscle abnormalities were especially common in the lateral rotator and gluteal groups. Fascial involvement was most widespread in DM. Fatty replacement of muscle tissue began early during the course of disease in IMNM and the other groups. An optimal combination of tMRI features had only a 55% positive predictive value for diagnosing IMNM.ConclusionsCompared with patients with DM or PM, IMNM is characterised by more widespread muscle involvement. Anti-SRP-positive patients have more severe muscle involvement than anti-HMGCR-positive patients.
Journal Article
The alveolar immune cell landscape is dysregulated in checkpoint inhibitor pneumonitis
2019
Checkpoint inhibitor pneumonitis (CIP) is a highly morbid complication of immune checkpoint immunotherapy (ICI), one which precludes the continuation of ICI. Yet, the mechanistic underpinnings of CIP are unknown.
To better understand the mechanism of lung injury in CIP, we prospectively collected bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples in ICI-treated patients with (n=12) and without CIP (n=6), prior to initiation of first-line therapy for CIP (high dose corticosteroids. We analyzed BAL immune cell populations using a combination of traditional multicolor flow cytometry gating, unsupervised clustering analysis and BAL supernatant cytokine measurements.
We found increased BAL lymphocytosis, predominantly CD4+ T cells, in CIP. Specifically, we observed increased numbers of BAL central memory T-cells (Tcm), evidence of Type I polarization, and decreased expression of CTLA-4 and PD-1 in BAL Tregs, suggesting both activation of pro-inflammatory subsets and an attenuated suppressive phenotype. CIP BAL myeloid immune populations displayed enhanced expression of IL-1β and decreased expression of counter-regulatory IL-1RA. We observed increased levels of T cell chemoattractants in the BAL supernatant, consistent with our pro-inflammatory, lymphocytic cellular landscape.
We observe several immune cell subpopulations that are dysregulated in CIP, which may represent possible targets that could lead to therapeutics for this morbid immune related adverse event.
Journal Article
Steroid-refractory PD-(L)1 pneumonitis: incidence, clinical features, treatment, and outcomes
by
Feliciano, Josephine
,
Marrone, Kristen
,
Forde, Patrick M
in
Adrenal Cortex Hormones - therapeutic use
,
Adult
,
Aged
2021
BackgroundImmune-checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-pneumonitis that does not improve or resolve with corticosteroids and requires additional immunosuppression is termed steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis. Herein, we report the clinical features, management and outcomes for patients treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), infliximab, or the combination of IVIG and infliximab for steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis.MethodsPatients with steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis were identified between January 2011 and January 2020 at a tertiary academic center. ICI-pneumonitis was defined as clinical or radiographic lung inflammation without an alternative diagnosis, confirmed by a multidisciplinary team. Steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis was defined as lack of clinical improvement after high-dose corticosteroids for 48 hours, necessitating additional immunosuppression. Serial clinical, radiologic (CT imaging), and functional features (level-of-care, oxygen requirement) were collected preadditional and postadditional immunosuppression.ResultsOf 65 patients with ICI-pneumonitis, 18.5% (12/65) had steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis. Mean age at diagnosis of ICI-pneumonitis was 66.8 years (range: 35–85), 50% patients were male, and the majority had lung carcinoma (75%). Steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis occurred after a mean of 5 ICI doses from PD-(L)1 start (range: 3–12 doses). The most common radiologic pattern was diffuse alveolar damage (DAD: 50%, 6/12). After corticosteroid failure, patients were treated with: IVIG (n=7), infliximab (n=2), or combination IVIG and infliximab (n=3); 11/12 (91.7%) required ICU-level care and 8/12 (75%) died of steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis or infectious complications (IVIG alone=3/7, 42.9%; infliximab alone=2/2, 100%; IVIG + infliximab=3/3, 100%). All five patients treated with infliximab (5/5; 100%) died from steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis or infectious complications. Mechanical ventilation was required in 53% of patients treated with infliximab alone, 80% of those treated with IVIG + infliximab, and 25.5% of those treated with IVIG alone.ConclusionsSteroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis constituted 18.5% of referrals for multidisciplinary irAE care. Steroid-refractory ICI-pnuemonitis occurred early in patients’ treatment courses, and most commonly exhibited a DAD radiographic pattern. Patients treated with IVIG alone demonstrated an improvement in both level-of-care and oxygenation requirements and had fewer fatalities (43%) from steroid-refractory ICI-pneumonitis when compared to treatment with infliximab (100% mortality).
Journal Article
Intravenous Immunoglobulin as Potential Adjunct Therapy for Interstitial Lung Disease
by
Hallowell, Robert W.
,
Amariei, Diana
,
Danoff, Sonye K.
in
Autoimmune Diseases - drug therapy
,
Combined Modality Therapy - methods
,
Humans
2016
Intravenous Ig (IVIg) is a pooled plasma product consisting primarily of monomeric IgG. For the past several decades, the use of IVIg has expanded to include the treatment of various autoimmune and inflammatory disorders, including Kawasaki’s disease, antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody–associated vasculitis, systemic lupus erythematosis, and the inflammatory myopathies. IVIg is thought to exert its immunomodulatory effects through a variety of mechanisms: neutralization of pathogenic autoantibodies; alteration of immune cell effector function; suppression of cytokine and chemokine activity; and interference with complement activation. Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is a frequent complication of autoimmune disorders and connective tissue diseases, and the presence of ILD is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Although there are currently no large studies to support the use of IVIg in the treatment of ILD, it is being used off-label with increasing frequency for refractory cases that have failed to respond to standard immunosuppression. Although associated with less systemic toxicity and global immunosuppression than traditional agents, IVIg is much more costly. Therefore, although the routine use of IVIg to treat ILD is not currently recommended, future studies to determine its role in pulmonary disease are warranted.
Journal Article
Association of fine specificity and repertoire expansion of anticitrullinated peptide antibodies with rheumatoid arthritis associated interstitial lung disease
2014
Background Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is associated with high morbidity and mortality in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Citrullinated proteins are observed in RA lung tissues; however, the association of specific anticitrullinated peptide antibodies (ACPA) with ILD in RA is unknown. Methods RA patients underwent multidetector CT (MDCT) of the chest, from which ILD features and a semiquantitative ILD Score (ILDS; range 0–32) were assessed. Anti-CCP (CCP2) and levels of a panel of antibodies against 17 citrullinated and four non-citrullinated peptides were assessed from concurrent serum samples using a custom Bio-Plex bead array. High level ACPA was defined as ≥the group 75th percentile. Results Among the 177 RA patients studied, median levels of CCP2 and all specific ACPAs were 46–273% higher among RA patients with versus those without ILD (all p values <0.05), and higher levels correlated with higher ILDS. In contrast, levels of non-citrullinated protein antibodies were not higher in those with ILD. RA patients had a median of 2 high level ACPA reactivities (range 0–16), with each high level ACPA associated, on average, with a 0.10 unit higher ILDS (p=0.001). This association remained significant after adjusting for characteristics associated with ILD (age, gender, current and former smoking, Disease Activity Score for 28 joints, current prednisone and leflunomide use). More high level ACPA were observed in those with versus without pulmonary function restriction or impaired diffusion. Conclusions Our findings of a broader ACPA repertoire in RA ILD suggest a possible role for ACPA in the pathogenesis of ILD.
Journal Article
Smoking and Subclinical ILD in RA versus the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
2016
A population-based cohort showed an association between cigarette smoking and subclinical parenchymal lung disease defined as regions of increased computed tomography (CT) lung densitometry. This technique has not been applied to the rheumatoid arthritis (RA) population where associated ILD is highly prevalent. The association between cumulative cigarette smoking and volume of areas of high attenuation (HAA: >-600 and <-250 Hounsfield Units) on full inspiratory CT was compared in 172 RA participants and 3,969 controls in a general population sample. Multivariable regression models were used to adjust for demography, anthropometrics, percent emphysema, and CT parameters. The mean cumulative cigarette smoking exposure was 25 (IQR 10-42) and 15(IQR 5-31) pack-years for the RA and non-RA cohorts, respectively. Mean HAA was 153(±57) cm3 and 129(±50) cm3 in the RA and non-RA cohorts, respectively. Each 10 cigarette pack-year increment was associated with a higher HAA by 0.03% (95% CI, 0.007-0.05%) in RA patients and by 0.008% (95% CI, 0.003-0.01%) in those without RA (interaction p = 0.001). Cigarette smoking was associated with higher lung attenuation; with a magnitude of association more pronounced in those with RA than in the general population. These data suggest that cigarette smoking may be a more potent ILD risk factor for RA patients than in the general population.
Journal Article
Identification of progressive pulmonary fibrosis: consensus findings from a modified Delphi study
by
Nicholson, Andrew G.
,
Brown, Kevin K.
,
Danoff, Sonye K.
in
Biopsy
,
Carbon monoxide
,
Clinical medicine
2024
Background
We sought consensus among practising respiratory physicians on the prediction, identification and monitoring of progression in patients with fibrosing interstitial lung disease (ILD) using a modified Delphi process.
Methods
Following a literature review, statements on the prediction, identification and monitoring of progression of ILD were developed by a panel of physicians with specialist expertise. Practising respiratory physicians were sent a survey asking them to indicate their level of agreement with these statements on a binary scale or 7-point Likert scale (− 3 to 3), or to select answers from a list. Consensus was considered to be achieved if ≥ 70% of respondents selected the same answer, or, for responses on a Likert scale, the median score was ≤ –2 (disagree/not important) or ≥ 2 (agree/important) with an interquartile range ≤ 1. There were three rounds of the survey.
Results
Surveys 1, 2 and 3 were completed by 207, 131 and 94 physicians, respectively, between March 2022 and July 2023. Decline in forced vital capacity (FVC), decline in diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide, and increased fibrosis on high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) were ranked as the most important endpoints for determining progression. Consensus was reached that progression on HRCT or a decline in FVC ≥ 10% from baseline is sufficient to determine progression, and that small declines in multiple endpoints indicates progression. Consensus was reached that a histological pattern of usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) is a risk factor for progression of ILD, but that a biopsy to look for a UIP pattern should not be performed solely for prognostic reasons. Consensus was not reached on the time period over which progression should be defined. There was consensus that appropriate management of ILD depends on the type of ILD, and that ‘despite adequate management’ or ‘despite usual management’ should be included in the definition of progression.
Conclusions
This modified Delphi process provided consensus statements on the identification of ILD progression that were supported by a broad group of clinicians and may help to inform clinical practice until robust evidence-based guidelines are available.
Journal Article
Rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease in patients with anti-melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5-positive dermatomyositis: serial changes on HRCT
2022
BackgroundAnti-melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (anti-MDA5) antibodies in patients with dermatomyositis are associated with rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease (RP-ILD). Computed tomography (CT) plays a central role in the diagnosis of RP-ILD and may help characterize the temporal changes.MethodsWe report five anti-MDA5-positive dermatomyositis patients with serial CT scans spanning their acute RP-ILD disease course.ResultsOur case series highlights the variable imaging pattern that can manifest in this setting, including diffuse alveolar damage and nonspecific interstitial pneumonia patterns. Three patients in our series died within 4 months of their disease onset, whereas the other two patients survived.ConclusionThe serial CT changes in anti-MDA5 disease are dynamic and variable; therefore, it is imperative to maintain a broad differential when faced with these HRCT patterns to improve the diagnosis and management of this underrecognized entity.
Journal Article