The aim of this study was to assess the importance of paraneoplastic syndromes as an early sign of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). A procedure for searching paraneoplastic syndromes, based on 40 years of reports in the literature, was established and the prevalence of paraneoplastic syndromes estimated in 68 patients with resectable NSCLC. Stages I and II were considered eligible for surgery straight away. Patients in Stage IIIA underwent surgery if partially or completely responsive to three courses of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Paraneoplastic syndromes were assessed and confirmed in nine patients (13%). Motor-sensory neuropathy, arthritis and arthralgias to the knees, periarthritis to the shoulder, hypertrophic osteopathy, clubbing, pruritus were observed. Only three patients with painful osteoarthropathies were diagnosed with NSCLC by tracing their paraneoplastic syndrome, whereas most of them (36/68) were diagnosed incidentally through a chest radiograph taken for tumour-unrelated symptoms. A careful research of paraneoplastic syndromes in high risk patients may guide the doctor to a resectable NSCLC diagnosis. Recent onset arthritis and arthralgias, which cannot be explained otherwise, should be considered to be early clues of lung cancer.
Malignancies, antiproliferative drug treatment, cancer-related conditions like immobilization, perioperative status and radiotherapy are risk factors for hypercoagulability. Setting aside mass or invasion-related venous thrombosis, the differential diagnosis regarding the etiopathogenesis (paraneoplastic syndrome or antiproliferative treatment) is usually problematic. The authors report a case of combined malignant hemangiopericytoma and recurrent deep venous thrombosis in the right inferior limb. Through a literature review, the following issues are discussed: 1) the criteria for cyto-histopathologic assessment; 2) the involvement of pericytes both in coagulation and platelet aggregation; 3) the importance of discriminating true paraneoplastic syndromes from other tumor-related clinical manifestations; 4) the response to external radiotherapy of malignant hemangiopericytoma as limited disease; 5) the poor results of doxorubicin-ifosfamide polychemotherapy and dacarbazine monochemotherapy in metastatic disease. Although doxorubicin-ifosfamide treatment was in progress in the reported case, the authors conclude that the recurrent deep venous thrombosis is likely to be paraneoplastic, even if such a diagnosis has not been previously reported in the literature.
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