Effect of Alemtuzumab (CAMPATH 1-H) in patients with inclusion-body myositis

نویسندگان

  • Marinos C. Dalakas
  • Goran Rakocevic
  • Jens Schmidt
  • Mohammad Salajegheh
  • Beverly McElroy
  • Michael O. Harris-Love
  • Joseph A. Shrader
  • Ellen W. Levy
  • James Dambrosia
  • Robert L. Kampen
  • David A. Bruno
  • Allan D. Kirk
چکیده

Sporadic inclusion-body myositis (sIBM) is the most common disabling, adult-onset, inflammatory myopathy histologically characterized by intense inflammation and vacuolar degeneration. In spite of T cell-mediated cytotoxicity and persistent, clonally expanded and antigen-driven endomysial T cells, the disease is resistant to immunotherapies. Alemtuzumab is a humanized monoclonal antibody that causes an immediate depletion or severe reduction of peripheral blood lymphocytes, lasting at least 6 months. We designed a proof-of-principle study to examine if one series of Alemtuzumab infusions in sIBM patients depletes not only peripheral blood lymphocytes but also endomysial T cells and alters the natural course of the disease. Thirteen sIBM patients with established 12-month natural history data received 0.3 mg/kg/day Alemtuzumab for 4 days. The study was powered to capture > or =10% increase strength 6 months after treatment. The primary end-point was disease stabilization compared to natural history, assessed by bi-monthly Quantitative Muscle Strength Testing and Medical Research Council strength measurements. Lymphocytes and T cell subsets were monitored concurrently in the blood and the repeated muscle biopsies. Alterations in the mRNA expression of inflammatory, stressor and degeneration-associated molecules were examined in the repeated biopsies. During a 12-month observation period, the patients' total strength had declined by a mean of 14.9% based on Quantitative Muscle Strength Testing. Six months after therapy, the overall decline was only 1.9% (P < 0.002), corresponding to a 13% differential gain. Among those patients, four improved by a mean of 10% and six reported improved performance of daily activities. The benefit was more evident by the Medical Research Council scales, which demonstrated a decline in the total scores by 13.8% during the observation period but an improvement by 11.4% (P < 0.001) after 6 months, reaching the level of strength recorded 12 months earlier. Depletion of peripheral blood lymphocytes, including the naive and memory CD8+ cells, was noted 2 weeks after treatment and persisted up to 6 months. The effector CD45RA(+)CD62L(-) cells, however, started to increase 2 months after therapy and peaked by the 4th month. Repeated muscle biopsies showed reduction of CD3 lymphocytes by a mean of 50% (P < 0.008), most prominent in the improved patients, and reduced mRNA expression of stressor molecules Fas, Mip-1a and alphaB-crystallin; the mRNA of desmin, a regeneration-associated molecule, increased. This proof-of-principle study provides insights into the pathogenesis of inclusion-body myositis and concludes that in sIBM one series of Alemtuzumab infusions can slow down disease progression up to 6 months, improve the strength of some patients, and reduce endomysial inflammation and stressor molecules. These encouraging results, the first in sIBM, warrant a future study with repeated infusions

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منابع مشابه

Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis.

Sir, The recent Brain publication (Dalakas et al., 2009) describing a clinical study of alemtuzumab in patients with inclusion body myositis nicely demonstrates the feasibility of enrolling and following a cohort of these patients over a long period of time as participants in an intervention study. The authors state that ‘in [inclusion body myositis] one series of alemtuzumab infusions can slow...

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis

Sir, The recent Brain publication (Dalakas et al., 2009) describing a clinical study of alemtuzumab in patients with inclusion body myositis nicely demonstrates the feasibility of enrolling and following a cohort of these patients over a long period of time as participants in an intervention study. The authors state that ‘in [inclusion body myositis] one series of alemtuzumab infusions can slow...

متن کامل

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Reply to: Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis

Sir, Dr Greenberg misinterprets several important aspects of our study, including the scope and applied methodology. Below we have addressed the points raised in his correspondence. This was a proof-of principle molecular clinicopathological study designed to investigate the effect of alemtuzumab on endomysial T cells and disease progression; it was not primarily a trial of clinical efficacy. A...

متن کامل

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Reply: Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis

Sir, Dr Greenberg misinterprets several important aspects of our study, including the scope and applied methodology. Below we have addressed the points raised in his correspondence. This was a proof-of principle molecular clinicopathological study designed to investigate the effect of alemtuzumab on endomysial T cells and disease progression; it was not primarily a trial of clinical efficacy. A...

متن کامل

Reply: Comment on alemtuzumab and inclusion body myositis

Sir, Dr Greenberg misinterprets several important aspects of our study, including the scope and applied methodology. Below we have addressed the points raised in his correspondence. This was a proof-of principle molecular clinicopathological study designed to investigate the effect of alemtuzumab on endomysial T cells and disease progression; it was not primarily a trial of clinical efficacy. A...

متن کامل

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Brain

دوره 132  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2009