# Myopathies Associated With Monoclonal Gammopathies of Clinical Significance: A Narrative Review

**Authors:** Mohamed Reda Belkhribchia

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.100388 · 2025-12-30

## TL;DR

This review discusses rare muscle diseases linked to monoclonal gammopathies and highlights the importance of early diagnosis and chemotherapy for treatment.

## Contribution

The paper provides a narrative review of MGCS-associated myopathies, emphasizing their distinct clinical features and treatment approaches.

## Key findings

- MGCS-associated myopathies include AL amyloidosis, SLONM-MG, and MGCS-GSM, each with unique clinical presentations.
- Muscle biopsy is essential for confirming these myopathies due to their distinct pathological features.
- Chemotherapy is considered a key treatment for MGCS-associated myopathies due to their treatable nature.

## Abstract

Monoclonal gammopathies of clinical significance (MGCS)-associated myopathies are rare diseases in which the monoclonal protein (M-protein) causes significant muscle damage. The pathophysiology of MGCS-associated myopathies remains unclear. A toxic M-protein may cause muscle degradation directly through deposition of its light and/or heavy chains in the muscle or indirectly via complex dysregulation of the immune system. Among the MGCS-associated myopathies, amyloid light chain (AL) amyloidosis-associated myopathy and sporadic late-onset nemaline myopathy with monoclonal gammopathy (SLONM-MG) are recognized. However, non-amyloid light chain deposition disease (LCDD)-associated myopathy and the recently described MGCS-associated glycogen storage myopathy (GSM) are also rare entities belonging to the array of MGCS-associated myopathies. In AL amyloidosis-associated myopathy and non-amyloid LCDD-associated myopathy, the muscle involvement usually occurs in the context of a broader systemic disease. Whereas, in SLONM-MG and MGCS-GSM, no systemic involvement occurs outside the muscle (skeletal and cardiac muscle). The confirmation of these myopathies relies on distinctive pathological features in muscle biopsy studies. Since these acquired myopathies are linked to MGCS, many authors consider that chemotherapy is the best therapeutic approach to manage these myopathies. Despite their severity, an early and accurate diagnosis is crucial due to the treatability of MGCS-associated myopathies.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Associated (MESH:D018886), SLONM-MG (MESH:D017696), systemic disease (MESH:D034721), muscle involvement (MESH:C566343), AL amyloidosis (MESH:D000075363), GSM (MESH:D006008), amyloid LCDD (MESH:D058225), non (MESH:C580335), Monoclonal Gammopathies (MESH:D010265), muscle damage (MESH:D009133), Myopathies (MESH:D009135), MGCS-GSM (MESH:D008998)

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853134/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853134