| Literature DB >> 24965744 |
Mikolaj Piotr Zaborowski1, Marek Spaczynski, Ewa Nowak-Markwitz, Slawomir Michalak.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Paraneoplastic neurological syndromes (PNS) are neurologic deficits triggered by an underlying remote tumor. PNS can antedate clinical manifestation of ovarian malignancy and enable its diagnosis at an early stage. Interestingly, neoplasms associated with PNS are less advanced and metastasize less commonly than those without PNS. This suggests that PNS may be associated with a naturally occurring antitumor response.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24965744 PMCID: PMC4282879 DOI: 10.1007/s00432-014-1745-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Res Clin Oncol ISSN: 0171-5216 Impact factor: 4.553
Classical paraneoplastic syndromes
| Classical paraneoplastic neurological syndromes |
|---|
| Encephalomyelitis |
| Limbic encephalitis |
|
|
| Opsoclonus–myoclonus |
|
|
| Chronic gastrointestinal pseudo-obstruction |
| Lambert–Eaton myasthenic syndrome |
| Dermatomyositis |
PNS the most commonly associated with ovarian tumors are in bold (Graus et al. 2004)
Onconeural and neuronal surface antibodies
| Onconeural and neuronal surface antibodies | ||
|---|---|---|
| Well characterized | Partly characterized | Neuronal surface antibodies |
Anti-Hu
Anti-CV2 Anti-Ma
| Anti-Tr Anti-Zic4 Anti-mGluR1 ANNA3 PCA2 | Anti-VGKC complex antigens (LGI1 or CASPR2)
Anti-AMPAR Anti-GABABR Anti-GlyR Anti-VGCC-Ab Anti-mGluR1 Anti-mGluR5 |
Antibodies detected commonly in PNS associated with ovarian tumors are in bold (Graus et al. 2004; Titulaer et al. 2011; Zuliani et al. 2012)
Definite and possible PNS according to diagnostic criteria as published by Graus et al. (2004)
| Definite PNS | Possible PNS |
|---|---|
|
| |
| 1. A classical syndrome and cancer that develop within 5 years of the diagnosis of the neurological disorder | 1. A classical syndrome, no onconeural antibodies, no cancer is diagnosed, but at high risk for having an underlying tumor |
| 2. A non-classical syndrome that resolves or significantly improves after cancer treatment without concomitant immunotherapy provided that the syndrome is not susceptible to spontaneous remission | 2. A neurological syndrome (classical or not) with partially characterized onconeural antibodies and no cancer |
| 3. A non-classical syndrome with onconeural antibodies (well characterized or not) and cancer that develops within 5 years of the diagnosis of the neurological disorder | 3. A non-classical syndrome, no onconeural antibodies and cancer present within 2 years of diagnosis |
| 4. | |
Neurological syndrome with well-characterized antibodies (in bold) is a clinical setting that requires intense search for underlying malignancy and often enables its detection at an early stage. Reproduced from ‘Recommended diagnostic criteria for paraneoplastic neurological syndromes’ (Graus et al. 2004) with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Fig. 1Ovarian cancer cell expresses cdr 2 antigen that triggers immune response against malignancy. The same cdr2 antigen is a intracellular protein in Purkinje cell in cerebellum. As a result, cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) cross-react against nervous tissue. This mechanism represents the prevailing view on the pathogenesis of paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD) related to ovarian cancer. The hallmarks of immune reaction, however, are not detected in all patients
Fig. 2NMDA receptor (NMDAR) is expressed on the surface of ovarian teratoma cells. As a result of immune reaction, anti-NNMAR antibodies are produced. The same receptor is present at the dendrites of neurons in many region of central nervous system. Anti-NMDAR antibodies enter nervous tissue through the vasculature and react against the target protein. Consequently, neural signaling mediated by NMDA receptor is considerably disturbed leading to both psychiatric and neurologic symptoms