The term "paraneoplastic" was first applied by Guichard and Vignon in 1949 to relate the multiple nerve deficits in a patient with cervical carcinoma to her malignant disease in pathophysiologic terms.
The term "paraneoplastic" was first applied by Guichard and Vignon in 1949 to relate the multiple nerve deficits in a patient with cervical carcinoma to her malignant disease in pathophysiologic terms.
Paraneoplastic syndromes are a heterogeneous group of different symptom complexes which are not directly caused by the tumor itself or by its metastases, but which are causally or formally genetically linked to the presence of the tumor.
The symptom complexes are caused, on the one hand, by a paracrine alteration of the surrounding microenvironment of the tumor (by paracrine secreted mediators and hormones), and, on the other hand, by humoral tumor products that influence other organs. The clinico-morphologically recognizable paraneoplastic symptoms are specific and thus directly recognizable only in a few cases. They are also not linked to the location of the tumor or its metastases, but often correlate in their severity with the course of the tumor disease. They manifest themselves before or during tumor disease, but may also precede it for a long time under certain circumstances. Thus, they are also assigned an important role as indicators for the early detection of the underlying malignant disease, especially with regard to the possibly still curative treatment of a primarius. Paraneoplastic symptoms may also regress after removal of the primary tumor and its potential metastases, or after successful chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
The nephrogenic paraneoplastic syndromes can be subdivided as follows:
Glomerular diseases
Tubulointerstitial disorders
Microvascular disorders
Disturbances of water and electrolyte balance
The pathogenesis of paraneoplastic syndromes often remains unclear. However, symptoms likely arise secondary to substances secreted by the tumor or as a result of antibody formation against tumor cells that cross-react with other tissues. Symptoms may occur in any organ system.
Glomerular diseases: These manifest with the typical signs of glomerulopathy with usually severe proteinuria (often as nephrotic syndrome with protein excretion > 3.5 g per day, edema, hypalbuminemia and hyperlipidemia), hematuria with nephritic sediment or also with the new onset of hypertension or renal insufficiency. Tumor-associated glomerulopathies occur predominantly after the age of 40 and may be a first indication of the presence of a neoplasm. In this age group, an annual malignancy incidence of 0.8% is found with initial manifestation of nephrotic syndrome (Brueggemeyer et al. 1987).
Tubulointerstitial disorders: Tubular damage is very common in association with individual malignancies and is caused by different pathogenetic mechanisms. They are usually manifested by increasing renal insufficiency or disturbances of tubular partial functions.
Microvascular Diseases:
Disturbances of water and electrolyte balance:
Therapeutically, the treatment of the underlying diseases is in the foreground in all tumor-associated glomerulopathies. Specific therapeutic measures such as immunosuppression are exclusively performed in the context of chemotherapy of the tumor, if required. Concomitant hypertension control may be required. The use of renal replacement procedures in cases of renal insufficiency requiring dialysis must be discussed in light of the individual prognosis.
Myeloma kidney: A specific therapeutic approach for the treatment of myeloma kidney is plasmapheresis. In the presence of very high paraproteinemia, this is intended to reduce the tubular paraprotein load and thus decrease the progression of renal failure. However, the success of this intervention has not yet been definitively established (Moist et al. 1999). In contrast, the indication for plasmapheresis in the presence of hyperviscosity syndrome is uncontroversial. The use of renal replacement therapy is also established in the presence of a given individual prognosis, since the overall survival of patients is independent of the degree of renal insufficiency present (Sharland et al. 1997).