Paraneoplastic syndromes are diverse and their biology is not fully understood. Paraneoplastic neurological syndrome seems to occur when proteins on the surface of cancer cells are also present on normal brain and nerve cells.
When the body mounts an immune response to the tumour cells, the antibodies and immune cells produced then also attack the nervous system, causing progressive nerve damage.
Autoimmune paraneoplastic syndromes are most common in people with lung, breast, ovarian or lymphatic cancers and can sometimes be diagnosed by identifying antibodies in their serum that are active against nerve tissue.
Other paraneoplastic syndromes arise when a tumour secretes hormones, enzymes or other physiologically active substances, or when other substances produced by the tumour interfere with metabolic functions.
Some small cell lung cancers, for example, produce a hormone that causes the kidneys to retain water. The paraneoplastic syndrome that develops causes immediate and serious symptoms.