Litcius/Paper detail

Clinical characteristics and prognostic analysis of Chinese dermatomyositis patients with malignancies

Chi Shao, Shan Li, Yuxin Sun, Ying Zhang, Kai Xu, Xin Zhang, Hui Huang

2020Medicine13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Although a strong association between idiopathic inflammatory myositis (IIM) and malignancy has been widely reported, few studies have solely focused on the concurrence of dermatomyositis (DM) and malignancies (DM-malignancy).We conducted a retrospective analysis of 37 DM-malignancy cases among 363 DM patients admitted to our hospital between January 2012 and December 2017.(1) The mean age at DM diagnosis was higher for DM-malignancy patients than for DM-non-malignancy patients [(54.76 ± 9.77) years vs (48.57 ± 12.82) years, t = 2.84, P = .005]. (2) Gynecological malignancies (35.90%/14 cases) were the most common malignancies. Malignancies were diagnosed before DM for 7 DM-malignancy patients. The interval between the DM and malignancy diagnoses for the remaining 32 DM-malignancy patients was less than 6 months for 18 patients (46.15%), less than 1 years for 23 patients (58.9%), and less than 2 years for 29 patients (74.26%). (3) There was no significant difference either in antinuclear antibody or anti-Ro-52 positivity between the 2 groups (P > .05). (4) Multivariate analysis demonstrated that DM onset age ≥50 years and concurrence with ILD increased the risk of death for DM patients [hazard ratio (HR): 1.62 and 2.72; 95% confidence interval (CI): (1.08-2.43) and (1.47-5.02); P = .02 and 0.001, respectively], and male gender decreased the risk of death [HR 0.66, 95% CI (0.44-0.98), P = .04]. DM-malignancy patients were older than DM-non-malignancy patients. Gynecological malignancies were the most common malignancies among these patients. A DM onset age ≥50 years, female sex and the presence of ILD were independent risk factors for death.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMalignancyDermatomyositisInternal medicineHazard ratioGastroenterologyConfidence intervalRetrospective cohort studyMultivariate analysisInflammatory Myopathies and DermatomyositisEosinophilic Disorders and SyndromesDermatological and Skeletal Disorders