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Periarticular myositis and muscle fibrosis are cytokine-dependent complications of inflammatory arthritis
Jessica Day, … , Gordon S. Lynch, Ian P. Wicks
Jessica Day, … , Gordon S. Lynch, Ian P. Wicks
Published March 4, 2025
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2025;10(7):e179928. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.179928.
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Research Article Inflammation Muscle biology

Periarticular myositis and muscle fibrosis are cytokine-dependent complications of inflammatory arthritis

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Abstract

The deleterious consequences of chronic synovitis on cartilage, tendon, and bone in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are well described. In contrast, its effects on periarticular skeletal muscle are under-studied. Furthermore, while TNF inhibition is an effective therapy for RA synovitis, it exacerbates fibrosis in muscle injury models. We aimed to investigate whether myositis and muscle fibrosis are features of inflammatory arthritis and evaluate whether targeted RA therapies influence these disease features. Periarticular muscle was analyzed in murine models of poly- and monoarticular inflammatory arthritis: serum transfer–induced arthritis, collagen-induced arthritis, K/BxN, and antigen-induced arthritis (AIA). Periarticular myositis and an increase in muscle fibroadipocyte progenitors (FAPs) were observed in all models, despite diverse arthritogenic mechanisms. Periarticular muscle fibrosis was observed from day 15 in AIA. Neither etanercept nor baricitinib suppressed periarticular myositis or subsequent fibrosis compared to vehicle, despite reducing arthritis. Notably, etanercept failed to prevent muscle fibrosis even when initiated early, but this was not linked to increased FAP survival or collagen production. Corroborating these data, radiographic and histological analyses revealed periarticular myositis in patients with RA. We conclude that periarticular myositis and fibrosis are under-recognized features of inflammatory arthritis. Targeted RA therapies may not prevent periarticular muscle sequelae, despite controlling arthritis.

Authors

Jessica Day, Cynthia Louis, Kristy Swiderski, Angus Stock, Huon Wong, Wentao Yao, Bonnia Liu, Suba Nadesapillai, Gordon S. Lynch, Ian P. Wicks

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Figure 1

Periarticular myositis complicates multiple experimental models of inflammatory arthritis.

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Periarticular myositis complicates multiple experimental models of infla...
(A) H&E-stained sections of periarticular quadriceps (Q), tibialis anterior (TA), hamstrings, and gastrocnemius muscles from AIA (n = 6) and control mice (n = 6) were graded for inflammation. The quadriceps grade is the mean of vastus lateralis and vastus medialis scores. Representative images are presented. High-magnification view corresponds to boxed region in the low-magnification image of the quadriceps. Data are representative of more than 3 independent experiments. (B) H&E-stained sections from periarticular gastrocnemius and TA muscles obtained from STIA (n = 12) and control (n = 11) mice were graded for inflammation. (C) H&E-stained sections from periarticular quadriceps and TA muscles from CIA (n = 9) and control mice (n = 7) were graded for inflammation. (D) H&E-stained sections from sequential levels of periarticular muscle in AIA mice (n = 7), as indicated in the schematic, were graded for inflammation. Schematic prepared with BioRender. (E) Ipsilateral and contralateral periarticular quadriceps muscles were obtained from AIA mice receiving a unilateral intraarticular injection of mBSA (n = 5–6 per time point) and graded for inflammation on day 3 (D3), D15, and D30. Mean ± SD presented. Statistical significance was determined using unpaired Student’s t tests (A–C), 1-way ANOVA followed by Bonferroni’s post hoc correction (D), or a mixed effects model followed by Šidák’s post hoc correction (E). For E, time-course comparisons were analyzed only for ipsilateral data. Scale bars: 1000 μm (low-magnification Q images, A and C), 100 μm (high-power Q image, A), and 500 μm (TA images, A and B). *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01; ****P < 0.0001.

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