| Literature DB >> 31770612 |
Grazyna Adamus1, Rachel Champaigne2, Sufang Yang2.
Abstract
Autoantibodies (AAbs) against retinal antigens can be found in patients with cancer and unexplained vision loss unrelated to the cancer metastasis. Cancer-associated retinopathy (CAR) is a rare paraneoplastic visual syndrome mediated by AAbs. Our goal was to determine whether CAR patients with different malignancies have a specific AAb or repertoire of AAbs that could serve as biomarkers for retinal disease. We found AAbs against 12 confirmed retinal antigens, with α-enolase being the most frequently recognized. The significant finding of the study was a high incidence of anti-aldolase AAbs in colon-CAR, anti-CAII in prostate-CAR, and anti-arrestin in skin melanoma patients thus these AAbs could serve as biomarkers in the context of clinical presentation and could support the diagnosis of CAR. However, a lack of AAb restriction to any one antigenic protein or to one retinal cellular location makes screening for a CAR biomarker challenging.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31770612 PMCID: PMC6989367 DOI: 10.1016/j.clim.2019.108317
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Immunol ISSN: 1521-6616 Impact factor: 3.969