Paraneoplastic vision loss occurs in people who have cancer, but the vision loss is not a result of cancer spreading to the eye. Instead, it is related to an immune response against an underlying malignancy. In many cases, the vision loss occurs before the cancer is diagnosed, and antibody positivity can direct the cancer search.
In this "Test in Focus" episode of the "Answers From the Lab" podcast, Andrew McKeon, M,B., B.Ch., M.D., provides an overview of Mayo Clinic Laboratories' new paraneoplastic vision loss evaluation that can help detect this disorder. The test looks for evidence of two antibodies: CRMP-5 antibody and recoverin. The presence of either one of those antibodies confirms a diagnosis of paraneoplastic vision loss.
"These are the two biomarkers that we can say are reliable and specific," Dr. McKeon says. "There are broad panels of other antibodies available for potential diagnosis of autoimmune retinopathy. But we've not included those biomarkers in this evaluation because, from our clinical practice, we have not had good experience with the specificity of those tests. And we've come across those antibodies in patients who have had non-autoimmune diagnoses."
Listen to learn more from Dr. McKeon about when the paraneoplastic vision loss evaluation should be ordered and how the results can affect patient care.
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Paraneoplastic Vision Loss Evaluation, Serum (Mayo ID: PVLE)
Recoverin-IgG Antibody by Immunoblot, Serum (Mayo Test ID: RCVBS)
Paraneoplastic Vision Loss Evaluation, Serum (Mayo ID: PVLE)
Recoverin-IgG Antibody by Immunoblot, Serum (Mayo Test ID: RCVBS)
Paraneoplastic Vision Loss Evaluation, Serum (Mayo ID: PVLE)
Patient Preparation:
Recoverin-IgG Antibody by Immunoblot, Serum (Mayo Test ID: RCVBS)
Paraneoplastic Vision Loss Evaluation, Serum (Mayo ID: PVLE)
Recoverin-IgG Antibody by Immunoblot, Serum (Mayo Test ID: RCVBS)