ABSTRACT
         
         Among the group of inflammatory myopathies, dermatomyositis (DM) remains the most
            treatable subset responding, in the majority of the cases, to steroids, intravenous
            immunoglobulin (IVIg), or immunosuppressants. Inclusion-body myositis (IBM) remains
            the most difficult disease to treat; in uncontrolled studies immunosuppressants and
            steroids have not helped, and controlled trials with IVIg have been disappointing.
            Polymyositis (PM) is a very uncommon, although still overdiagnosed, disorder and its
            rarity poses difficulties in performing large-scale therapeutic studies; based on
            small series, however, PM seems to variably respond to immunotherapeutic interventions.
            The most consistent problem in the treatment of inflammatory myopathies remains the
            distinction of true PM from the difficult-to-treat cases of IBM, or from necrotizing
            myopathies and dystrophic processes where secondary endomysial inflammation may be
            prominent. The future in the management of PM, DM, and IBM seems promising because
            of the availability of new agents directed at T-cell activation molecules, cytokines,
            chemokines, and adhesion receptors. In IBM, the use of such immunomodulatory drugs
            may be combined with agents that block cytokine-enhancing amyloid or with agents that
            inhibit the formation and polymerization of amyloid fibrils.
         
         
         
            
KEYWORDS
         
         
            Polymyositis - dermatomyositis - inclusion-body myositis