Abstract
There is an urgent need to standardise our approach to connective tissue disease classification in ILD and IPAF http://ow.ly/IPm0304nLVV
To the Editor:
We commend Oldham et al. [1] for their recent article using the new European Respiratory Society/American Thoracic Society criteria for interstitial pneumonia with autoimmune features (IPAF) to re-characterise a cohort of interstitial lung disease (ILD) patients in their centre. IPAF defines individuals with interstitial pneumonia and features suggestive of a connective tissue disease (CTD), but not meeting established CTD classification criteria [2]. Of their 422 patients with previously diagnosed idiopathic interstitial pneumonia (IIP) or undifferentiated-CTD ILD (UCTD-ILD), approximately one-third met the IPAF criteria, including nearly 20% of those with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, 25% with unclassifiable IIP and almost all of those with UCTD-ILD [1]. Importantly, survival was markedly worse in the IPAF group compared with a CTD-ILD cohort [1]. Within the IPAF domains, the presence of at least one clinical criterion was predictive of a favourable outcome, while morphological, multi-compartment involvement carried a significantly increased risk of mortality [1].
Interestingly, only one patient in their IPAF cohort had detectable anti-tRNA synthetase antibodies [1], presumably because patients with myositis-specific antibodies were considered to have CTD-ILD, even in the absence of systemic features of idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (IIM). Physicians often face the challenge of interpreting the significance of a positive autoantibody result in an ILD patient with no systemic manifestations of a CTD, especially when definitive rheumatological criteria have not been established. Such is the case with the IIMs, a group of systemic autoimmune conditions including polymyositis and dermatomyositis (DM). Our awareness of IIMs is critical as ILD occurs in over 50% of those affected and is the chief determinant of disease progression and prognosis [3].
Since 1970, there have been numerous suggested criteria for the diagnosis and classification of the IIMs [4]. Updated criteria incorporate IIM subgroups based on autoantibody profiles, but there remains no international agreement on how or if such immunoassays should be included [4, 5]. This variation between definitions can lead to major differences in how a patient with positive myositis antibodies is classified: either as IPAF or CTD-ILD; as demonstrated by Oldham et al.'s [1] cohort where such patients were considered to have “anti-synthetase syndrome” and thus CTD-ILD. We believe standardisation of the IIM classification used across our ILD populations is essential, as the inclusion or exclusion of these patients in IPAF cohorts in future studies may have major ramifications for our understanding and further research of IPAF.
Myositis autoantibodies are present in up to 40% of patients with IIMs and are associated with an increased risk of ILD (table 1) [7, 8]. Anti-tRNA synthetase antibodies are the most commonly detected, and are present in 25–35% of all IIM patients and up to two-thirds of those who demonstrate ILD [5, 7, 8]. Anti-Jo1 is the most common of the eight identified anti-synthetase antibodies [7]. The presence of anti-tRNA synthetase antibodies is thought to characterise a unique phenotype, known as “anti-synthetase syndrome”, which carries a substantial risk of ILD and increased mortality. Diagnosis remains very challenging due to significant variability in the degree and timing of other features that may include myositis, arthritis, Raynaud's phenomenon, mechanic's hands, skin rashes, sicca syndrome and fever, and ILD can predominate with subclinical myositis in a significant proportion [5, 6]. Fundamental questions remain unanswered. How do we interpret the presence of auto-antibodies in the absence of other definitive features? What are the implications for management? There is an urgent need to standardise and validate revised definitions of anti-synthetase syndrome, such as that proposed by Connors et al. [7].
These problems are not just limited to anti-synthetase antibodies. The anti-CADM-140 antibody (also known as anti-MDA5) is associated with “clinically amyopathic DM” and rapidly progressive ILD (CADM-ILD), which has a 6-month survival rate of only 40–55% [9]. Anti-CADM antibodies have a potential vital role in early identification of CADM-ILD requiring aggressive immunosuppression, but without a clear definition for CADM, research on a uniform cohort remains difficult.
Just as previous research on the patient group now identifiable as IPAF was hindered by inconsistent nomenclature, there is a parallel and urgent need to standardise our approach to the evaluation of CTD in our ILD clinics. An added complication is the lack of standardisation of testing and interpretation of autoantibody results. We await with interest the results of the “International Myositis Classification Criteria Project”, a multidisciplinary project launched by the International Myositis Assessment and Clinical Studies Group, sponsored by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of Health and supported by the American College of Rheumatology, European League Against Rheumatism, and The Myositis Association. With enrolment complete and analysis in progress, the goal of the study is to develop consensus classification criteria for the IIMs [10].
We strongly believe there is a need for the ILD community to agree which myositis criteria to use when evaluating our patients. Authors of the IPAF statement recognise that the listed antibodies and serological criteria may require modification as our knowledge evolves [2]. We do not know what the optimum “list” is, but the IPAF classification is a first important step towards developing a minimum dataset that will help determine which criteria should be recommended for clinical practice. If we do not work promptly with rheumatologists, immunologists and internists to standardise our approach to serological testing and rheumatological disease classification, ILD patients with ill-defined extrapulmonary features may continue to fall under different diagnostic umbrellas (i.e. IPAF versus CTD-ILD), which will continue to threaten our ability to make accurate comparisons and conclusions about the natural history and clinical implications of IPAF.
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside this article at erj.ersjournals.com
- Received June 24, 2016.
- Accepted August 17, 2016.
- Copyright ©ERS 2016