Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149925 (small cell lung cancer)
6,491 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to clarify the pathogenesis of paraneoplastic syndrome, immunohistochemical studies were performed in a patient with subacute sensory neuropathy secondary to a small cell lung cancer. The case was a 73-year-old ex-farmer, whose chief complaints were pins and needles sensation of distal limbs and gait difficulty. After 6 weeks prodromata of pain in the upper limbs and numbness in all the limbs, he became unable to stand up without assistance. Neurological examinations on admission revealed marked sensory disturbances with glove and stocking type hypalgesia to pin prick and the loss of position and vibration senses in the distal extremities. His deep tendon reflexes also decreased in all the limbs. A chest X-ray showed a mass in the left upper lung field. A transbronchial lung biopsy of the mass revealed a small cell carcinoma. He was treated with anti-cancer drugs and radiation but he died of pneumonia after 8 months illness. Autopsy revealed a marked demyelination of the entire posterior column of the spinal cord. Dorsal root ganglia were infiltrated by lymphocytes with significant neuronal loss. Immunohistochemically, most of the infiltrated cells around the neurons were classified as CD8+ with fewer CD4+ lymphocytes. No B-lymphocytes were detected in the ganglia. The HLA-ABC and HLA-DR positive cells were found only among the satellite cells, not in the neurons. The serum and CSF from the patient were immunohistologically reacted with the nuclei and cytoplasm of all neurons of human as well as of rats, indicating the presence of anti-Hu type antineuronal antibody in the patient's CSF as well as serum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Immunohistochemical studies of paraneoplastic subacute sensory neuropathy--an analysis of antineuronal antibody and infiltrated lymphocytes]. 132 6

A 15-year experience with paraneoplastic sensory neuronopathy at the Mayo Clinic is reviewed. Of 26 patients with paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy, 19 had small cell lung cancer, 4 had breast cancer, and 3 had other neoplasms. There was a striking predominance of females (20:6). Neuropathic symptoms (pain, paresthesia, sensory loss) were asymmetric at onset, with a predilection for the upper limbs; in three patients, symptoms were confined to the arms. Electrophysiologic testing revealed absent sensory responses and normal or minimally altered motor responses. Slightly more than half the patients had associated autonomic, cerebellar, or cerebral abnormalities. In some patients, treatment of the neoplasm seemed to halt progression of the neuronopathy, but none had neurologic improvement and most continued to worsen, even when the oncologic response was good. Distinguishing between paraneoplastic and nonparaneoplastic sensory neuronopathies can be difficult, but prominent neuropathic pain, neurologic dysfunction involving more than the peripheral sensory system, or an increased cerebrospinal fluid protein value should prompt a careful search for a cancer.
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PMID:The distinctive clinical features of paraneoplastic sensory neuronopathy. 139 44

One hundred and fifty patients presenting with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) to chest physicians, were assessed neurologically. Neuromuscular or autonomic deficits were common and occurred in up to 44% of cases. Weakness, dry mouth, and weight loss were not mutually independent and may represent the syndrome formerly described as carcinomatous neuromyopathy. By contrast, undoubted paraneoplastic syndromes were much less commonly detected. Two patients had the Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS) and one had subacute sensory neuropathy (SSN). In these patients, neurological symptoms antedated other manifestations of cancer, by between six and 17 months. The 95% confidence interval for the prevalence of LEMS or SSN among SCLC patients was 0-4%, consistent with the results of previous retrospective or smaller studies: summing these, the overall prevalence of LEMS among SCLC patients is close to 3%, which implies about 250 new cases per annum in England and Wales. If LEMS and SSN are the least uncommon neurological paraneoplastic syndromes in SCLC patients, this may reflect the accessibility of motor nerve terminals and dorsal root ganglia to cross-reactive anti-tumour cell antibodies.
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PMID:Neurological paraneoplastic syndromes in patients with small cell lung cancer. A prospective survey of 150 patients. 165 14

Neurologic toxicity occurring in patients treated with cisplatin chemotherapy is limited primarily to peripheral neuropathy and ototoxicity. Lhermitte's sign, electric-like paresthesias precipitated by cervical spine flexion, has recently been described as a self-limited complication in cisplatin-treated patients. We report the development of Lhermitte's sign accompanied by cervical motor neuropathy, dorsal column myelopathy, and sensory neuropathy in a patient treated with cisplatin and etoposide for small cell lung cancer. Persistence of the neurologic deficit suggests that potentially irreversible spinal cord toxicity may complicate treatment with this chemotherapy combination.
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PMID:Spinal cord toxicity complicating treatment with cisplatin and etoposide. 216 Nov 75

We looked for the presence of the anti-Hu antibody in the sera from 50 normal subjects; 44 patients with small cell lung cancer, not associated with paraneoplastic disease; and 25 patients with small cell lung cancer associated with paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy, encephalomyelitis, or both. Using the avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase method and a highly sensitive quantitative Western blot analysis, the anti-Hu antibody was not detected in the 50 normal human sera. Seven of the 44 patients with small cell lung cancer but no paraneoplastic syndrome had detectable levels (average titer, 76 U/ml) of anti-Hu antibody on Western blot. These levels are significantly lower than the average titer of the 25 patients who had small cell lung cancer and paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy or encephalomyelitis (average titer, 4,592 U/ml). In the group with nonparaneoplastic small cell lung cancer (low anti-Hu titer) there was a predominance of women (5 women: 2 men), and all patients had "limited" disease when diagnosed. In the antibody-negative group the sex ratio was 16 women to 21 men and 51% of the patients had "extensive" disease. None of the 7 patients with a low-titer anti-Hu antibody developed a paraneoplastic syndrome by the time of writing. The anti-Hu antibody appears, when present, to be a good marker for small cell lung cancer and, when present at high titer, for small cell lung cancer associated with a paraneoplastic syndrome.
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PMID:Detection of the anti-Hu antibody in the serum of patients with small cell lung cancer--a quantitative western blot analysis. 216 35

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is known to express the HuD protein, the neuronal antigen homologous to Drosophila Elav and Sxl genes involved in neuronal and sex development. HuD is the target of an immune response including high titered antibodies causing paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis and sensory neuropathy. Because the p53 recessive oncogene is mutated and anti-p53 antibodies frequently occur in cancer patients, we wondered if the development of anti-HuD antibodies signaled the presence of HuD mutations in lung cancer. The HuD gene was mapped to chromosome region 1p using a human-mouse hybrid cell panel. We confirmed that 26 of 46 cancer (43 lung cancer and 3 mesothelioma) cell lines expressed HuD mRNA and that this expression, as well as protein expression by Western blot, correlated strongly with the SCLC neuroendocrine phenotype. Southern blot and single-strand conformation polymorphism analyses showed that HuD was not mutated in 78 lung cancers, including patients with the severe paraneoplastic syndrome. Northern blot analysis showed that lung cancer cell lines expressed two major mRNAs (4.3 and 4.0 kilobases) of HuD. We found the three previously described alternative spliced mRNA forms (HuDpro, HuD, and HuDmex). In addition, we also found HuD mRNA had an alternative splicing form in its 5'-coding region. This alternative splice introduced 87 base pairs of sequence and a termination codon resulting in a predicted small, truncated protein (11 amino acids) reminiscent of the male-specific truncated protein in the Sex-lethal (Sxl) gene of Drosophila. However, mRNAs encoding both full-length and truncated proteins were expressed in all SCLCs. These results show that the HuD gene is not mutated in lung cancer, including tumors from patients producing anti-HuD antibodies, but HuD expression is an independent marker or determinant of the neuroendocrine differentiation seen in SCLC.
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PMID:Molecular analysis of the HuD gene encoding a paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis antigen in human lung cancer cell lines. 806 66

We describe 2 patients with Hodgkin's disease (HD) who developed a subacute predominantly sensory neuropathy with areflexia, which improved after tumour removal, and review 6 cases with sensory neuropathies associated with HD from the literature. The neuropathy revealed a relapse of the tumour in patient 1 and was the presenting feature of HD with Castleman's disease-like lesions in patient 2. Nerve conduction velocities were normal, sensory and motor potential amplitudes were reduced, and F waves were increased. Unlike sensory ganglionitis associated with small cell lung cancer, sensory evoked potentials were not abolished. Nerve biopsies showed axonal degeneration and mild perivascular inflammatory infiltrates. We believe that the cases of subacute sensory neuropathies associated with HD that show dramatic improvement after treatment of the underlying tumour correspond to a variant of HD-associated inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy rather than to a true paraneoplastic sensory ganglionitis.
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PMID:Subacute sensory neuropathy associated with Hodgkin's disease. 815 7

Clinicopathological and immunohistochemical studies were performed in a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, myelitis, sensory neuropathy and cerebellar degeneration secondary to small cell lung cancer. A 67-year-old male smoker developed orthostatic dizziness 6 months prior to admission. Over the following months, his wife noticed that he became forgetful and confused. Over the next three weeks, he became unable to sit or stand unaided and admitted to our service. On admission, he was lethargic and disoriented in time and place. Neurological examination revealed marked limb weakness with distal dominant muscle atrophy. A chest radiograph demonstrated a mass in the right middle lobe and a bronchial biopsy revealed a small cell carcinoma. CT scan and MRI of the brain revealed abnormalities in the bilateral medial temporal lobes and putamen. He was treated with anti-cancer chemotherapy, but died of respiratory failure after 13 months illness. Postmortem examination showed a mass in the right middle lobe of the lung. No tumor metastases were noted in the nervous tissue. Microscopical examinations of the nervous system revealed neuronal loss, astrogliosis and perivascular and parenchymatous lymphocytic infiltration in the hippocampus, subiculum, amygdala, putamen, medulla oblongata, spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia. Loss of Purkinje cells was also seen in the cerebellum without lymphocytic infiltration. Immunohistochemical analysis of the patient's serum and CSF by the use of adult rat brain revealed immunoreactivity at the hippocampal pyramidal neurons CA3 and CA4. At the higher dilution, neuronal nuclei were specifically stained.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A clinicopathological study of a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, myelitis, sensory neuropathy and cerebellar degeneration, associated with a unique antineuronal antibody]. 839 16

A routine neurological examination, electromyography studies and conductance in sensory and motoric fibres of upper and lower extremity peripheral nerves, was carried out in 65 subjects with small cell lung cancer prior instituting chemotherapy. None of the patients demonstrated metabolic changes nor toxic injury to the neurological system. The results of the neurological examination led to suspicion of neuropathy in 22 (34%) which was later confirmed by the electromyographic studies. In 12 subjects only EMG abnormalities were found allowing to diagnose a subclinical phase of neuropathy. Altogether 52% of the subjects demonstrated injury of the peripheral nervous system. Sensory neuropathy was observed in 6 patients, motor-sensory in 7, motoric neuropathy in 12. In one of the subjects from the latter group a myasthenic syndrome of the Eaton-Lambert type was found. In 7 patients the EMG results suggested injury of the anterior horn cells, in two further patients the clinical and EMG data suggested injury of the peripheral and spinal column.
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PMID:[Neuropathies in small cell lung cancer]. 861 51

Neuropathic arthropathy of both knees after paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy developed in a 64-year-old woman. The patient was found to have small cell lung cancer 2 months after the onset of a sensory neuropathy that was diagnosed as paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy, a nonmetastatic neurologic complication in patients with malignancy. The onset of paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy was followed by the gradual onset of neuropathic arthropathy. This is the first well documented report on neuropathic arthropathy in a patient with paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy.
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PMID:Neuropathic arthropathy caused by paraneoplastic sensory neuropathy. A case report. 918 18


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