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You may have a type of cancer associated with "antineuronal antibodies" in your blood.
Antibodies are substances made by the immune system. They are used by the body to fight infections and other diseases. Antineuronal antibodies are antibodies that react with nerve cells but they also react with some tumors. We believe that the immune system makes these antibodies to fight the cancer. In some patients with these antibodies, the tumor is smaller than in patients who have no antibodies. Sometimes, with a very strong antibody test, patients may develop neurologic problems such as weakness, numbness or memory loss. One purpose of this study is to determine if a patient with cancer and a positive antineuronal antibody blood test has a smaller tumor and responds better to treatment than a patient with cancer and a negative test. Another purpose of this study is to determine whether patients with a positive antibody test develop neurologic problems such as weakness, numbness or memory loss.
We will measure your blood for several different kinds of antibodies in addition to antineuronal antibodies to determine if the presence of antibodies predicts "prognosis", i.e. smaller tumor and better response to treatment, or predicts the development of neurologic problems.
No tissue samples are required for this study. However, if tissue or sputum is obtained by your oncologist for diagnostic purposes, we will ask your doctors or the pathology department to provide us with samples of these specimens. This will not involve any additional surgery or discomfort to you.
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Objectives:
To determine prospectively the prevalence and specificity of anti-Hu and other paraneoplastic antibodies in patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and other cancers including, but not limited to, ovarian cancer, breast cancer and Hodgkin's disease / the prevalence of other autoimmune antibodies in patients with SCLC and other cancers including but not limited to anti-nuclear antibodies, anti-P53 antibodies, rheumatoid factor and anti-calcium channel antibodies /the prevalence and significance of antibodies against a LEMS-related antigen (MysB)/whether the production of autoantibodies including anti-Hu antibodies is related to patient MHC phenotype.
Conventional nerve conduction studies or EMG are not required, unless the patient has symptoms and signs of neuropathy, or the patient is asymptomatic but the quantitative sensory test is abnormal. In these situations nerve conduction and EMG studies of upper and lower extremities will be obtained. All patients who undergo CSF analysis, will be required to have a blood test (glucose, proteins, and IgG) to be compared with the CSF values and to obtain the IgG index (a measurement of intrathecal synthesis of IgG).
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121 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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