Paraneoplastic motor disorders

Handb Clin Neurol. 2023:196:231-250. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-323-98817-9.00018-1.

Abstract

Paraneoplastic neurological disorders (PNDs) are heterogeneous clinicopathologic syndromes that occur throughout the neuraxis resulting from damage to organs or tissues remote from the site of a malignant neoplasm or its metastases. The discordance between severe neurological disability and even an indolent malignancy suggests an underlying neuroimmunologic host immune response that inflicts nervous tissue damage while inhibiting malignant tumor growth. Motor system involvement, like other symptoms and signs, is associated with focal or diffuse involvement of the brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerve, neuromuscular junction or muscle, alone or in combination due to an underlying neuroimmune and neuroinflammatory process targeting neural-specific antigens. Unrecognized and therefore untreated, PNDs are often lethal making early detection and aggressive treatment of paramount importance. While the combination of clinical symptoms and signs, and analysis of detailed body and neuroimaging, clinical neurophysiology and electrodiagnostic studies, and tumor and nervous system tissue biopsies are all vitally important, the certain diagnosis of a PND rests with the discovery of a corresponding neural-specific paraneoplastic autoantibody in the blood and/or spinal cerebrospinal fluid.

Keywords: Cancer; Motor disorders; Paraneoplastic.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Autoantibodies
  • Biopsy
  • Brain
  • Central Nervous System
  • Humans
  • Motor Disorders*

Substances

  • Autoantibodies