- Expression of interleukin-18 in muscle tissue of patients with polymyositis or dermatomyositis and effects of conventional immunosuppressive treatment.
Expression of interleukin-18 in muscle tissue of patients with polymyositis or dermatomyositis and effects of conventional immunosuppressive treatment.
To investigate the expression of IL-18 in symptomatic and asymptomatic muscle tissues of patients with PM and DM and the effects of conventional immunosuppressive treatment on such expression. Two cohorts of patients were included in this study. The first cohort consisted of 10 new-onset myositis patients. IL-18 expression was compared between symptomatic and asymptomatic muscle biopsies that were taken prior to treatment. The second cohort consisted of another 10 patients with repeated muscle biopsies before and after 8 months with conventional immunosuppressive treatment. Using immunohistochemistry, IL-18 expression in muscle tissues was compared before and after treatment. Biopsies from seven healthy individuals were included as controls. IL-18 expression was predominantly localized to inflammatory cells and capillaries in patients and mostly to capillaries in healthy controls. Total IL-18 expression in muscle tissues from the new-onset patients, at both symptomatic and asymptomatic sites, was significantly higher compared with healthy controls (P = 0.007 and P = 0.002) with no statistical difference in appearances between symptomatic and asymptomatic sites. The number of IL-18 positive capillaries was not different among symptomatic, asymptomatic and healthy muscles. Total IL-18 expression appeared lower in biopsies from patients receiving and improving with immunosuppressive treatment, particularly the number of IL-18 positive inflammatory cells but not the number of IL-18 positive capillaries, which was consistent with significantly decreased expression of CD68+ macrophages (P = 0.04). IL-18 is highly expressed in muscle tissue in the context of inflammatory myopathies and based on its plausible effector functions could provide a novel therapeutic target in future.