- Price, Mark A;
- Barghout, Victoria;
- Benveniste, Olivier;
- Christopher-Stine, Lisa;
- Corbett, Alastair;
- de Visser, Marianne;
- Hilton-Jones, David;
- Kissel, John T;
- Lloyd, Thomas E;
- Lundberg, Ingrid E;
- Mastaglia, Francis;
- Mozaffar, Tahseen;
- Needham, Merrilee;
- Schmidt, Jens;
- Sivakumar, Kumaraswamy;
- DeMuro, Carla;
- Tseng, Brian S
Background
There is a paucity of data on mortality and causes of death (CoDs) in patients with sporadic inclusion body myositis (sIBM), a rare, progressive, degenerative, inflammatory myopathy that typically affects those aged over 50 years.Objective
Based on patient records and expertise of clinical specialists, this study used questionnaires to evaluate physicians' views on clinical characteristics of sIBM that may impact on premature mortality and CoDs in these patients.Methods
Thirteen physicians from seven countries completed two questionnaires online between December 20, 2012 and January 15, 2013. Responses to the first questionnaire were collated and presented in the second questionnaire to seek elaboration and identify consensus.Results
All 13 physicians completed both questionnaires, providing responses based on 585 living and 149 deceased patients under their care. Patients were reported to have experienced dysphagia (60.2%) and injurious falls (44.3%) during their disease. Over half of physicians reported that a subset of their patients with sIBM had a shortened lifespan (8/13), and agreed that bulbar dysfunction/dysphagia/oropharyngeal involvement (12/13), early-onset disease (8/13), severe symptoms (8/13), and falls (7/13) impacted lifespan. Factors related to sIBM were reported as CoDs in 40% of deceased patients. Oropharyngeal muscle dysfunction was ranked as the leading feature of sIBM that could contribute to death. The risk of premature mortality was higher than the age-matched comparison population.Conclusions
In the absence of data from traditional sources, this study suggests that features of sIBM may contribute to premature mortality and may be used to inform future studies.