Systematic review links mitochondrial dysfunction to idiopathic inflammatory myopathies.
This is a systematic review that provides a narrative synthesis of existing evidence on immunometabolic dysregulation in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIMs). The scope covers mitochondrial dysfunction, metabolic reprogramming, and their links to disease features.
The authors synthesize that defective mitophagy, mitochondrial DNA depletion, and excessive reactive oxygen species production create a self-amplifying loop with interferon-driven inflammation. They also describe abnormal glycolysis, impaired fatty acid oxidation, and dysregulated tryptophan–kynurenine metabolism as shaping the immunometabolic landscape of IIMs. Metabolic shifts are correlated with disease severity, autoantibody profiles, and treatment resistance.
The review acknowledges key limitations: it is a narrative synthesis of existing evidence and does not report primary data, sample sizes, or quantitative effect estimates. Evidence certainty is not graded, and causal relationships are not established.
Practice relevance is restrained; emerging therapeutic strategies including antioxidant approaches, mitochondrion-targeted agents, metabolic modulators, and exercise-based interventions are highlighted as having translational potential for immunometabolic-based precision therapies. Clinicians should not infer specific treatment efficacy or safety from this review.