Intermuscular adipose tissue in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus

Author:

Gamboa Jorge LuisORCID,Carranza-León Daniel,Crescenzi Rachelle,Pridmore Michael,Peng Dungeng,Marton Adriana,Oeser Annette,Chung Cecilia P,Titze Jens,Stein Charles Michael,Ormseth Michelle

Abstract

ObjectivePatients with SLE frequently have debilitating fatigue and reduced physical activity. Intermuscular adipose tissue (IMAT) accumulation is associated with reduced physical exercise capacity. We hypothesised that IMAT is increased in patients with SLE and associated with increased fatigue, reduced physical activity and increased inflammation.MethodsIn a cross-sectional study, 23 patients with SLE and 28 control participants were evaluated. IMAT was measured in the calf muscles using sequentialT1-weighted MRI. Patient-reported physical activity and fatigue were measured and a multiplex proteomic assay was used to measure markers and mediators of inflammation.ResultsIMAT accumulation (percentage of IMAT area to muscle area) was significantly higher in SLE versus control participants (7.92%, 4.51%–13.39% vs 2.65%, 1.15%–4.61%, median, IQR, p<0.001) and remained significant after adjustment for age, sex, race and body mass index (p<0.001). In patients with SLE, IMAT accumulation did not differ significantly among corticosteroid users and non-users (p=0.48). In the study cohort (patients and controls), IMAT was positively correlated with self-reported fatigue score (rho=0.52, p<0.001) and inversely correlated with self-reported walking distance (rho=−0.60, p<0.001). Several markers of inflammation were associated with IMAT accumulation in patients with SLE, and gene ontology analysis showed significant enrichment for pathways associated with macrophage migration and activation in relation to IMAT.ConclusionPatients with SLE have greater IMAT accumulation than controls in the calf muscles. Increased IMAT is associated with greater fatigue and lower physical activity. Future studies should evaluate the effectiveness of interventions that improve muscle quality to alleviate fatigue in patients with SLE.

Funder

the Lupus Research Alliance, the National Institutes of Health

Veterans Health Administration Office of Research and Development

CDA

NSF

NIH

Vanderbilt University

Core

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Rheumatology,General Medicine

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