4.7 Article

Paraneoplastic isolated myelopathy Clinical course and neuroimaging clues

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 76, Issue 24, Pages 2089-2095

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31821f468f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Genzyme Corporation
  2. Guthy-Jackson Charitable Foundation
  3. Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
  4. NIH
  5. National Multiple Sclerosis Society

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Objective: To report the clinical phenotype and outcome of isolated paraneoplastic myelopathy. Methods: We systematically reviewed clinical, serologic, and MRI data for 31 patients (20 female) who presented with an isolated myelopathy and coexisting cancer: carcinoma (lung, 9; breast, 7; kidney, 2; thyroid, 2; ovary/endometrium, 2), melanoma (2), or other cancer (3), or a paraneoplastic autoantibody with strong cancer association (amphiphysin-immunoglobulin G [IgG], 9; collapsin response-mediator protein 5-IgG, 9; Purkinje-cell cytoplasmic autoantibody type 1, 2; antineuronal nuclear autoantibody [ANNA]-1, 1; ANNA-3, 1). Results: Of 31 patients who presented with a progressive myelopathy, symptom onset was subacute in 16 (52%). The median age was 62 years. CSF abnormalities included elevated protein (> 45 mg/dL), 22; pleocytosis, 15; excess oligoclonal bands (normal < 4), 7. MRI cord abnormalities identified in 20 patients were longitudinally extensive (> 3 vertebral segments), 14; symmetric tract or gray matter-specific signal abnormality, 15 (enhancing in 13). Myelopathy preceded cancer diagnosis in 18 patients (median interval 12 months; range 2-44). After myelopathy onset, 26 patients underwent oncologic treatment, immunosuppressive treatment (median delay to commencing immunotherapy 9.5 months [range 1-54]), or both; only 8 improved (31%). At last neurologic evaluation (median interval after onset 17 months; range 1-165 months), 16 patients (52%) were wheelchair-dependent (median time from onset to wheelchair 9 months [range 1-21]). Ten patients died after a median of 38 months from symptom onset (range 7-152). Conclusion: Symmetric, longitudinally extensive tract or gray matter-specific changes on spinal MRI should raise suspicion for a paraneoplastic myelopathy. Resulting disability is often severe. Only a minority of patients improve with treatment. Neurology (R) 2011; 76: 2089-2095

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