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Cancer and autoimmunity: autoimmune and rheumatic features in patients with malignancies

Journal

ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Volume 60, Issue 5, Pages 433-440

Publisher

BRITISH MED JOURNAL PUBL GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/ard.60.5.433

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Objectives-To review the autoimmune and rheumatic manifestations of patients with malignancy. Methods-A Medline search of all published papers using keywords related to malignancies, autoimmunity, rheumatic diseases, and paraneoplastic syndromes. Results-Patients with malignant diseases may develop autoimmune phenomena ana rheumatic diseases as a result of (a) generation of autoantibodies against various autoantigens, including oncoproteins (P185, 1-myc, c-myc, c-myb), tumour suppression genes (P53), proliferation associated antigens (cyclin A, B1, D1, E; CENP-F; CDK, U3-RNP), onconeural antigens (Hu, Yo, Ri, Tr), cancer/testis antigens (IMAGE, GAGE, RAGE, SSX, ESO, SCP, CT7), and rheumatic disease associated antigens (RNP, Sm). The clinical significance of the various autoantibodies is not clear. Anti-oncoprotein and anti-tumour suppression gene antigens are detected before the diagnosis of the cancer or in the early stages of the malignant disease, suggesting a potential diagnostic or prognostic role. Anti-onconeural antibodies are pathogenic and are associated with specific clinical neurological syndromes (anti-Hu syndrome and others). (b) Paraneoplastic syndromes,a wide range of clinical syndromes, including classic autoimmune rheumatic diseases that develop among patients with cancer. (r) Rheumatism after chemotherapy, a clinical entity characterised by the development of musculoskeletal symptoms after combination chemotherapy for malignancy Conclusion-Autoimmune and rheumatic features are not rare among patients with malignancies. They are the result of various diverse mechanisms and occasionally they may be associated with serious clinical entities.

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