36º Congresso Brasileiro de Reumatologia

Dados do Trabalho


Title

WHOLE BODY MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING IN JUVENILE DERMATOMYOSITIS. A LONGITUDINAL STUDY.

Background

Juvenile dermatomyositis ( JDM) is a rare multisystem connective tissues disorder of unknown aetiology.
Assessment of disease activity is a chalange in clinical practice.

Materials and methods

We included consecutive JDM patients followed in the rheumatology unit. All patients were submitted to clinical
and laboratory evaluation. WB-MRI images were obtained using a 1.5 T MRI scanner and short T inversion
recovery sequences (STIR). Muscle, peripheral inflammation and subcutaneous inflammations signal abnormalities
were scored in 42 muscular groups. Muscle inflammation was classified as: 0 = absent; 1 = Mild to moderate /
involvement less than 50% of muscle extension and 2 = Accentuated / greater than 50%. Peripheral and
subcutaneous inflammations were classified as: 0 = absent; 1 = present; and on proximal and distal extremities.
WB-MRI and clinical assessments were performed concurrently and results compared. Evaluation was repeated
after 12 months. Statistics was performed according to the nature of the variable.

Results

WB-MRI revealed muscle inflammation in 6 (31.6%) at study entry. We observed grade 2 muscle inflammation of
the right and left scapular girdle (1/19 patients), right and left pelvic girdle (2/19 patients) and right and left tight
(1/19 patients). Grade 1 inflammation was observed in peripheral right and left arm (2/19 patients), peripheral
right and left thigh (1/19 patients). Grade 1 subcutaneous inflammation was observed in right and left thigh (1/19
patients) and left leg (1/19 patients). Additionally we observed sacroiilitis (1/19 patients), spinal cord infarction
(21%) and osteonecrosis (5.2%). All patients were treated with standardized treatment. After 12 months 13/19
(68.4%) patients repeated the WB-MRI. Five (38.4%) patients had new/worsening of muscle and subcutaneous
inflammation, one (7.7%) patient had tibial medullary infarction. Correlations between WB-MRI muscle score and
disease activity measures were excellent (Manual Muscle Test: r=−0.88, Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale:
rs=−0.81). Patients with subcutaneous inflammation developed clinically evident subcutaneous calcifications
during follow-up.

Conclusions

WB-MRI provides additional information to clinical evaluation and represents a promising tool to determine the
grade of muscle inflammation to additional peripheral and subcutaneous tissue inflammation

Área

Pediatrics

Autores

CARLA HELENA CAPPELLO, SERGIO DERTKIGIL, EDUARDO BRONZATTO, ROBERTO MARINI, SIMONE APPENZELLER