| Literature DB >> 26821540 |
Richard A Rison1, Said R Beydoun2.
Abstract
The term paraproteinemic neuropathy describes a heterogeneous set of neuropathies characterized by the presence of homogeneous immunoglobulin in the serum. An abnormal clonal proliferation of B-lymphocytes or plasma cells, which may or may not occur in the context of a hematologic malignancy, produces the immunoglobulins in excess. If malignancy is identified, treatment should be targeted to the neoplasm. Most cases, however, occur as monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. Few prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled trials are available to inform the management of paraproteinemic neuropathies. Clinical experience combined with data from smaller, uncontrolled studies provide a basis for recommendations, which depend on the specific clinical setting in which the paraprotein occurs. In this review, we provide a clinically practical approach to diagnosis and management of such patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26821540 PMCID: PMC4731930 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0532-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Diagnostic tests for PPN
| Test | Description | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) | Venous blood sample. | ESR elevation is primarily due to increased levels of Ig (clonal or polyclonal) or fibrinogen |
| Serum total protein and albumin | Venous blood sample. | Protein elevated in: |
| Normal range: | Monoclonal gammopathy | |
| Serum total protein: 6 to 8 g/dL | Dehydration | |
| Serum albumin: 4 to 6 g/dL | Myeloma | |
| Waldenstrom macroglobulinemia | ||
| Sarcoidosis | ||
| Collagen vascular disease | ||
| Serum protein electrophoresis | Venous blood sample. | Indicated if serum protein and/or globulin is elevated or clinical findings raise suspicion of monoclonal gammopathy. |
| M protein, if present, is a discrete spike in the γ, β or α2 region. | ||
| MGUS, M peak: 0.5 to 3 g/dL, amount directly related to probability of progression to multiple myeloma or a related plasma cell malignancy. | ||
| Serum M spike present in 80 % of patients with myeloma. | ||
| Immunofixation | Venous blood sample. | Indicated when an M spike is found on serum electrophoresis or when clinical findings present suspicion of multiple myeloma, other plasma cell malignancy, amyloidosis, or WM. |
| Monoclonal immunoglobulin: | ||
| MGUS: IgG (73 %), IgA (11 %), IgM (14 %), IgD, κ or λ light chains | Defines the heavy and light chain type of the abnormal serum protein, which can discriminate between MGUS, multiple myeloma, other plasma cell malignancies, WM, and amyloidosis. | |
| Multiple myeloma: IgG (50 %), IgA (20 %), IgD (few), free light chains (17 %) | ||
| WM: IgM-κ | ||
| Amyloidosis: IgG, IgA, IgD, IgM, κ or λ light chains; 30 % non-secretory | ||
| Osteosclerotic myeloma: IgG-λ or IgA-λ | ||
| Heavy-chain disease: IgG, IgA, IgM, no light chain | ||
| Serum light chain quantitation | Venous blood sample. | Provides a rapid, accurate, quantitative measurement of λ and κ light-chain in serum. |
| κ free light chain: 3.3 to 19.4 mg/L | Increased light chain levels are seen in most plasma cell disorders, especially the more malignant disorders such as multiple myeloma. | |
| λ free light chain: 5.7 to 26.3 mg/L | Free light chain (FLC) ratio may be a risk factor for progression to malignancy [ | |
| Unlike urine Bence-Jones protein assays, results are not affected by changes in renal function. | ||
| The test is expensive and not widely available. | ||
| Autoantibody panels | Normal: | Measures presence and titer of antibodies. |
| Absence of antibody | Anti-MAG antibody assesses distal demyelinating sensory neuropathy. | |
| Anti-GM1 antibody assesses multifocal motor neuropathy. | ||
| Anti-GQ1b antibody assesses Miller-Fisher. | ||
| Please note that absolute absence of autoantibodies is not required for a “normal” test for many antibodies at different labs. | ||
| Cryoglobulins | Normal: | Serum blood specimen collected and separated while warm for cryoprecipitation over a period of up to 7 days. |
| Less than 80 μg/ml | At very high cryoglobulin titer states, cryoprecipitates during blood collection produce structures on peripheral blood smears that may be mistaken for leukocytes or platelets by automated cell differential analyzers. | |
| 24-h urine protein quantification and electrophoreses | Detects excretion of monoclonal immunoglobulin. | Dipstick test for proteinuria primarily detects albumin and often misses M protein. |
| Normal: | ||
| Urinary protein excretion less than 150 mg/day. | Recommended for patients with serum M spike or clinically-based suspicion of monoclonal gammopathy. | |
| Small amount of Bence-Jones protein not uncommon | ||
| Urine immunofixation | Characterizes urinary monoclonal immunoglobulin following test of 24-h urine and should be done if serum M spike is greater than 1.5 g/dL. | Indicated if multiple myeloma, WM, primary amyloidosis, or a related disorder is suspected, even if routine urinalysis is negative for protein, 24-h urine is within normal limits, or if no M spike is seen on electrophoresis of concentrated urine sample. |
| Electrodiagnostic (electro-myelogram and nerve conduction studies) | Determines whether symptoms are due to a muscle or nerve disorder by measuring conduction velocities and the presence or absence of conduction blocks. | Determines whether the polyneuropathy is axonal or demyelinating. |
| Tests help to localize the anatomic site of a lesion that is causing pain, and determine the presence of active denervation. | ||
| Bone marrow aspiration and biopsy | A sample is taken usually from the posterior superior iliac crest region. | Required if a high M protein level is found to investigate the possibility of multiple myeloma or lymphoma. |
| Normal result is age-appropriate cellularity and lineage distribution and < 10 % plasma cells. | May reveal clinically inapparent involvement. | |
| Requires local anesthesia and the assistance of an attendant. | ||
| Risk of infection and bleeding. | ||
| Radiographic skeletal bone survey | Two dimensional radiographs of the entire skeleton. | Survey detects lytic and sclerotic lesions as well as fractures which may be pathologic. |
| There is a relatively high radiation exposure. | ||
| Cerebrospinal fluid analysis | Investigate CIDP and leptomeningeal lymphomatous infiltration. | Elevated protein level is common in PPN. |
| Infiltration of the CNS by Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma will show clonal lymphocytes. | ||
| Viral infection may result in increased CSF lymphocytes but will not be clonal. | ||
| Autoantibodies can be tested within the CSF but the results may differ depending on the laboratory used. Absolute absence of autoantibodies is not required for a “normal” test for many antibodies at different labs. | ||
| Nerve biopsy | Biopsy of the superficial peroneal nerve is ideal so that a muscle biopsy of the peroneus brevis muscle may be done simultaneously; other choices include sural or superficial radial sensory nerves. | Identifies abnormal density of small and large axons and abnormal myelin sheaths. |
| Reserved for cases in which it is difficult to identify whether the process is predominantly axon degeneration or demyelination, or for cases where there is patchy, asymmetric, or focal involvement. | ||
| Evaluates suspected cases of infiltrative neoplasms, paraproteinemic vasculitis, or amyloidosis. | A negative nerve biopsy does not exclude amyloid neuropathy. | |
| Please note that as with serum and CSF autoantibody testing, results may differ depending on the laboratory used. | ||
| Muscle biopsy | See “Nerve biopsy” for best incision site. | The procedure helps distinguish between an atypical neurogenic disorder and a primary myopathic disorder. |
| Fat biopsy | A normal result is no amyloid protein. | The test is most often done when there is suspicion of amyloidosis. |
| Skin biopsy | Examines the degree of myelination of small fiber neurons. | Helps ascertain the presence or absence of small fiber neuropathy. |
| Epidermal nerve twig analysis via skin biopsy is sometimes done if small fiber neuropathy is suspected. | ||
| Whole-body computerized tomography scan | The scan can detect lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and ascites. | Intravenous contrast is usually required for better visualization of lymphoid structures. |
| Positron emission tomography scan | Functional images assess metabolic activity within various structures, including lymph nodes and may detect nodal, extranodal, and bone marrow involvement by lymphoma. | PET scan can be used concurrently with non-contrast CT scan to combine functional and anatomic imaging. |
| Acute inflammation and infection can also result in increased uptake safety profile of the procedure, even though it is less sensitive than biopsy. |
Treatment for paraproteinemia
| Treatment | Indication | Dose | Major contraindications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intravenous immune globulin (IVIG) | First line treatment for CIDP associated with M protein (off-label use) | 2 g/kg intravenously for 3–5 days, followed by maintenance dose of 1 g/kg every 3–4 weeks, followed by clinical reassessment | Hyperprolinemia |
| First line treatment for multifocal motor neuropathy (off-label) | Hypersensitivity to albumin | ||
| Alternative treatment for IgM/A/G-MGUS (after rituximab, off-label use) | Immunoglobulin A deficiency | ||
| Treatment of CANOMAD (off label use) | |||
| Corticosteroids | First line treatment for CIDP associated with M protein (off-label use) | Prednisone: | Corticosteroid hypersensitivity |
| An alternative treatment for IgM/A/G-MGUS (after rituximab or plasma exchange, off label use) | 1 to 1.5 mg/kg/day orally | Fungal infection | |
| Several treatment dosing regimens are available and duration is not agreed upon. | |||
| Azathioprine | Alternative immunosuppressive treatment (after IVIG or corticosteroids) for CIDP associated with M protein (off-label use) | Pregnancy (category D) | |
| Hypersensitivity to azathioprine | |||
| Rituximab | First line treatment for IgM-MGUS (off-label use) | Four weekly infusions of 375 mg/m2 rituximab [ | Hypersensitivity to rituximab |
| Alternative therapy for multifocal motor neuropathy (after IVIG, off label use) | |||
| Chlorambucil | Alternative therapy for IgM-MGUS (off label use) | 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg orally daily for 3 to 6 weeks | Hypersensitivity to chlorambucil |
| FDA pregnancy category D | |||
| Fludarabine | Alternative therapy for IgM-MGUS (off label use) | 40 mg/m2 for 5 days every 28 days | Hypersensitivity to fludarabine |
| FDA pregnancy risk category D | |||
| Melphalan | Treatment for POEMS | For POEMS (high dose): 10 mg/m2 for 4 days every 28 days [ | Hypersensitivity to melphalan |
| In combination with prednisone as treatment for AL | For AL: 0.15 mg/kg once daily for 7 days every 6 weeks, increasing the dose by 2 mg in each 6 week course. Should be used in combination with prednisone. | Should not be used in patients whose disease has demonstrated prior melphalan resistance | |
| Plasmapheresis (plasma exchange) | First line treatment of IgG/A MGUS | 3 to 5 exchanges every other day | Risks associated with frequent vascular access |
| May be helpful in severe cases of cryoglobulinemia. | Risk of transmission of infective agents if fresh plasma is used as replacement fluid | ||
| Anaphylaxis and allergic reactions may occur with reinfusion of plasma substitute | |||
| Autologous peripheral stem cell transplant | First line treatment of POEMS syndrome | Myeloablative doses of chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy followed by infusion of peripheral blood stem cells | Patients who undergo HCT are at risk for bacterial, viral, and fungal infections |
| Alternative treatment of AL, used in combination with melphalan | Early adverse effects include: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, mouth sores | ||
| Later adverse effects include: cataracts, sterility, increased risk of other neoplasias | |||
| Radiation therapy | First line treatment of dominant sclerotic plasmacytoma in POEMS syndrome | Radiation therapy delivered to osteosclerotic lesions in doses of 40–50 Gy | Adverse effects depend upon the location of the area irradiated |
| Increased risk of developing second malignancies in patients with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma |