An initial serum ferritin level of ≥450 ng/mL, P[A-a]O of ≥30 mmHg, and right middle lobe GGO score of ≥2 (GGO ≥5% of the lobe) were identified as poor prognostic factors for anti-MDA5 Ab-positive DM-IP patients.
Decreased concentrations of plasma brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and serum BDNF have been proposed to be a state marker of depression and a biological indicator of loaded psychosocial stress. Stress evaluations of participants in military mission are critically important and appropriate objective biological parameters that evaluate stress are needed. In military circumstances, there are several problems to adopt plasma BDNF concentration as a stress biomarker. First, in addition to psychosocial stress, military missions inevitably involve physical exercise that increases plasma BDNF concentrations. Second, most participants in the mission do not have adequate quality or quantity of sleep, and sleep deprivation has also been reported to increase plasma BDNF concentration. We evaluated plasma BDNF concentrations in 52 participants on a 9-week military mission. The present study revealed that plasma BDNF concentration significantly decreased despite elevated serum enzymes that escaped from muscle and decreased quantity and quality of sleep, as detected by a wearable watch-type sensor. In addition, we observed a significant decrease in plasma vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) during the mission. VEGF is also neurotrophic and its expression in the brain has been reported to be up-regulated by antidepressive treatments and down-regulated by stress. This is the first report of decreased plasma VEGF concentrations by stress. We conclude that decreased plasma concentrations of neurotrophins can be candidates for mental stress indicators in actual stressful environments that include physical exercise and limited sleep.
BackgroundAcute/subacute interstitial pneumonia in dermatomyositis (DM-A/SIP) is a disease associated with a poor prognosis that resists treatment with glucocorticosteroids (GC) and progresses rapidly in a period of weeks to months to death. We retrospectively studied outcomes, prognostic factors, and their relations with survival rate in patients with DM-A/SIP treated with early cyclosporine A (CSA)/GC combination therapy and 2-hour postdose blood concentration monitoring.MethodsThis study comprised 32 DM-A/SIP patients who were simultaneously treated with CSA and prednisolone. Clinical and laboratory findings were compared between those who died due to DM-A/SIP and those surviving 24 weeks after beginning of therapy. Prognostic factors were extracted, and their relations with the survival rate were evaluated.ResultsOf the 32 DM-A/SIP patients, 25 survived, 5 died of DM-A/SIP, and 2 died of infections. In those who died due to DM-A/SIP, ferritin level and the alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient were significantly increased compared with the survivors (P<0.001 and P = 0.002, respectively). Multivariate analyses showed that ferritin and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient were independent prognostic factors of poor outcome. The survival rate 24 weeks after beginning of treatment was significantly lower in those with a ferritin level of ≥600 ng/ml and alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient of ≥45 Torr (P<0.001 and P<0.001, respectively). All patients with both prognostic factors died, and the outcome was significantly poorer in these patients than in those with one or neither of the prognostic factors (P<0.001).ConclusionsWe identified pre-treatment high serum ferritin level and high alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient as poor prognostic factors in DM-A/SIP patients undergoing early CSA/GC combination therapy and showed that the outcomes were poor in patients with both factors.
The aim of this study was to investigate long-term prognosis and relapse of dermatomyositis complicated with interstitial pneumonia (DMIP) according to anti-aminoacyl tRNA synthetase (ARS) antibodies and anti-melanoma differentiation-associated gene 5 (MDA5) antibody. This retrospective study comprised 36 patients with DMIP who were divided into the anti-ARS antibody-positive group (ARS+) (n = 12), anti MDA5 antibody-positive group (MDA5+) (n = 11), double-negative group (ARS-/MDA5-) (n = 11), and double-positive group (ARS+/MDA5+) (n = 1). Clinical features, treatment, prognoses, and relapses during the 2 years after initiation of treatment were compared between three groups excluding ARS+/MDA5+ group. Although short-term (24-week) mortality in MDA+ was higher than that in ARS+ or ARS-/MDA5- (P = 0.004), there was no difference in long-term (2-year) mortality between the three groups. Relapse rate in ARS+ was higher than that in MDA5+ and ARS-/MDA5- during the 2 years after initiation of treatment (P = 0.044). There was no difference in serum KL-6 levels at the initiation of treatment between ARS+ and MDA5+, but serum ferritin levels in MDA5+ were significantly higher than those in ARS+ (P = 0.406, 0.042, respectively). Serum KL-6 and ferritin levels at 2 years after initiation of treatment in ARS+ were significantly higher than those in MDA5+ (P = 0.008, 0.034, respectively). We found that in MDA5+ DMIP, acute alveolar inflammation caused a poor prognosis early in the disease course, and in ARS+ DMIP, chronic injury to the alveolar epithelial cells or basement membrane caused long-term recurrence.
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