TY - JOUR T1 - Multicenter Registry on Inflammatory Myositis From the Rheumatology Society in Madrid, Spain: Descriptive Analysis JO - Reumatología Clínica (English Edition) T2 - AU - Nuño,Laura AU - Joven,Beatriz AU - Carreira,Patricia AU - Maldonado,Valentina AU - Larena,Carmen AU - Llorente,Irene AU - Tomero,Eva AU - Barbadillo,María Carmen AU - García-de la Peña,Paloma AU - Ruiz,Lucía AU - López-Robledillo,Juan Carlos AU - Moruno,Henry AU - Pérez,Ana AU - Cobo-Ibáñez,Tatiana AU - Almodóvar,Raquel AU - Lojo,Leticia AU - Monteagudo,Indalecio AU - García-De Yébenes,María Jesús AU - López-Longo,Francisco Javier SN - 21735743 M3 - 10.1016/j.reumae.2016.07.012 DO - 10.1016/j.reumae.2016.07.012 UR - https://reumatologiaclinica.org/en-multicenter-registry-on-inflammatory-myositis-articulo-S2173574317301235 AB - ObjectiveTo analyze clinical characteristics, survival and causes of death of patients diagnosed with autoimmune inflammatory myositis in the REMICAM registry from the Society of Rheumatology in the Community of Madrid (SORCOM). MethodsMulticenter cohort of patients diagnosed with autoimmune inflammatory myopathy with follow-up between January 1980 and December 2014. A total of 313 variables concerning demographic, clinical and morbidity data were collected, and a comparison was performed between clinical subgroups. ResultsA total of 479 patients were recruited from 12 centers with 14% of patients lost to follow-up. Seventy-four percent of cases were women, age at diagnosis of 44±23 years and a mean follow-up period of 10±8 years. The most frequent clinical subgroups were primary myositis (PM 29%, DM 22%), followed by overlap myositis (20.5%), juvenile myositis (18%), myositis associated with cancer (8%), immune-mediated necrotizing myositis (1%) and inclusion body myositis (1%). During the follow-up period, a total of 114 deaths (28%) were registered, the main causes being cancer (24%), infections (23%) and cardiovascular events (21%). ConclusionsA total of 479 patients were recruited in the REMICAM registry of inflammatory myopathies. Including sociodemographic, clinical and prognostic information, it represents the largest Spanish multicenter registry to date in rheumatology, and constitutes an important source for conducting further substudies. ER -