Post by Deanne Jenkyns on Jun 23, 2007 12:56:12 GMT 1
Tumour Markers
These are soluble molecules in the blood. They are usually glycoproteins, which can be detected by monoclonal antibodies. Each tumour marker has a variable profile of uses:
• Screening; screening tests require high sensitivity to detect early-stage disease. These tests also must have sufficient specificity to protect patients with false-positive results from unwarranted diagnostic evaluations. No tumour marker has yet demonstrated a survival benefit in randomised controlled trials of screening in the general population.
• For determining diagnosis and prognosis.
• Assessing response to therapy; 1 tumour marker values returning to normal may indicate cure despite radiographic evidence of persistent disease. In this circumstance, the residual tumour is frequently nonviable. Conversely, tumour marker levels may rise after effective treatment (possibly related to cell lysis), but the increase may not necessariyl mean treatment failure. However, a consistent increase in tumour marker levels, coupled with lack of clinical improvement, may indicate treatment failure. Residual elevation after definitive treatment usually indicates persistent disease. Following tumour marker response is particularly useful when other evidence of disease is not readily accessible.
• Monitoring for cancer recurrence; in monitoring these patients, tumour marker levels should be determined only when there is a potential for meaningful treatment.
• Tumour Markers1
• Tumour Marker Primary Tumour Other conditions which may yield positive results
• CA 27.29 Breast Cancer
• Colonic, gastric, hepatic, lung, pancreatic, ovarian, and prostate cancers.
Breast, liver, and kidney disorders, ovarian cysts.
• CEA Colorectal cancer
Lung, gastric, pancreatic, breast, bladder cancers, medullary thyroid and other head and neck, cervical, and hepatic cancers, lymphoma, melanoma. Cigarette smoking, peptic ulcers, IBD, pancreatitis, hypothyroidism, cirrhosis, biliary obstruction
• CA 19-9 Pancreatic and biliary tract cancers Colonic, oesophageal, and hepatic cancers, pancreatitis, biliary disease, cirrhosis.
• AFP Hepatocellular carcinoma, Nonseminomatous germ cell tumours Gastric, biliary, and pancreatic cancers, cirrhosis, viral hepatitis, pregnancy.
• b-HCG Nonseminomatous germ cell tumours, gestational trophoblastic disease
• Rarely elevated in gastrointestinal cancers, hypogonadal states, and marijuana use.
• CA125 Ovarian cancer Endometrial, fallopian tube, breast, lung, esophageal, gastric, hepatic, and pancreatic cancers, menstruation, pregnancy, fibroids, ovarian cysts, pelvic inflammation, cirrhosis, ascites, pleural and pericardial effusions, endometriosis
• PSA Prostate cancer
Prostatitis, benign prostatic hypertrophy, prostatic trauma, after ejaculation.
Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA)
This is a glycoprotein produced by prostatic epithelium. The PSA level can be elevated in2:
• Prostate cancer
• Prostatitis
• Benign prostatic hypertrophy
• Prostatic trauma
• After ejaculation
The positive predictive value of PSA levels in prostate cancer greater than 4 ng per mL, is 20 to 30%. This rises to 50% when PSA levels exceed 10 ng per mL. Nevertheless, 20 - 30% men with prostate cancer have PSA levels within normal ranges.2Fewer than 2% men with PSA levels below 20 ng per mL have bone metastases from prostate cancer.1
CA 27.29
CA 27.29 has better sensitivity and specificity than CA 15-3, and is now the preferred tumour marker in breast cancer.
• The CA 27.29 level is elevated in approximately 33% women with early-stage breast cancer (stage I or II).
• It is also elevated in 66% women with late-stage disease (stage III or IV).3
• CA 27.29 lacks predictive value in the earliest stages of breast cancer and so has no role in screening for or diagnosing the malignancy.
• One trial has shown it may be possible to detect asymptomatic recurrence (in patients at high risk - stage II or III) after curative treatment.4 CA 27.29 was highly specific and sensitive in detecting preclinical metastasis, and this may lead to prompt imaging of probable sites of metastasis, possibly decreasing morbidity because of earlier treatment.
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
CEA is an oncofetal glycoprotein, which is expressed in normal mucosal cells and overexpressed in adenocarcinoma, especially colorectal cancer. Levels exceeding 10 ng per mL are rarely due to benign disease.5
• ≤ 25 percent of patients with disease purely within the colon have an elevated CEA level. Sensitivity increases with advancing tumour stage.
• CEA values are elevated in approximately 50 percent of patients with tumour extension to lymph nodes.
• They are elevated in 75 percent of patients with distant metastasis.6
The major role for CEA levels is in following patients for relapse after intended curative treatment of colorectal cancer.
Cancer Antigen 125 (CA 125)
CA 125 is a glycoprotein normally expressed in coelomic epithelium during fetal development. This epithelium lines body cavities and envelopes the ovaries. Elevated CA 125 values most often are associated with epithelial ovarian cancer, although levels also can be increased in other malignancies.7
• Levels are elevated in about 85% women with ovarian cancer, but in only 50% those with stage I disease. Low sensitivity limits its usefulness in ovarian cancer screening. The positive predictive value is only 20 percent, translating to five exploratory laparotomies for each ovarian cancer diagnosed. Also, survival was not improved in the women who were found through CA 125 screening to have ovarian cancer.
• Higher levels are associated with increasing bulk of disease and are highest in tumours with nonmucinous histology.7
• Multiple benign disorders also are associated with CA 125 elevations, presumably by stimulation of the serosal surfaces.8
• In postmenopausal women with asymptomatic palpable pelvic masses, CA 125 levels higher than 65 units per mL have a positive predictive value of 98 percent for ovarian cancer.1
Alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP)
This is the major protein of fetal serum, but it is usually undetectable after birth.
These are soluble molecules in the blood. They are usually glycoproteins, which can be detected by monoclonal antibodies. Each tumour marker has a variable profile of uses:
• Screening; screening tests require high sensitivity to detect early-stage disease. These tests also must have sufficient specificity to protect patients with false-positive results from unwarranted diagnostic evaluations. No tumour marker has yet demonstrated a survival benefit in randomised controlled trials of screening in the general population.
• For determining diagnosis and prognosis.
• Assessing response to therapy; 1 tumour marker values returning to normal may indicate cure despite radiographic evidence of persistent disease. In this circumstance, the residual tumour is frequently nonviable. Conversely, tumour marker levels may rise after effective treatment (possibly related to cell lysis), but the increase may not necessariyl mean treatment failure. However, a consistent increase in tumour marker levels, coupled with lack of clinical improvement, may indicate treatment failure. Residual elevation after definitive treatment usually indicates persistent disease. Following tumour marker response is particularly useful when other evidence of disease is not readily accessible.
• Monitoring for cancer recurrence; in monitoring these patients, tumour marker levels should be determined only when there is a potential for meaningful treatment.
• Tumour Markers1
• Tumour Marker Primary Tumour Other conditions which may yield positive results
• CA 27.29 Breast Cancer
• Colonic, gastric, hepatic, lung, pancreatic, ovarian, and prostate cancers.
Breast, liver, and kidney disorders, ovarian cysts.
• CEA Colorectal cancer
Lung, gastric, pancreatic, breast, bladder cancers, medullary thyroid and other head and neck, cervical, and hepatic cancers, lymphoma, melanoma. Cigarette smoking, peptic ulcers, IBD, pancreatitis, hypothyroidism, cirrhosis, biliary obstruction
• CA 19-9 Pancreatic and biliary tract cancers Colonic, oesophageal, and hepatic cancers, pancreatitis, biliary disease, cirrhosis.
• AFP Hepatocellular carcinoma, Nonseminomatous germ cell tumours Gastric, biliary, and pancreatic cancers, cirrhosis, viral hepatitis, pregnancy.
• b-HCG Nonseminomatous germ cell tumours, gestational trophoblastic disease
• Rarely elevated in gastrointestinal cancers, hypogonadal states, and marijuana use.
• CA125 Ovarian cancer Endometrial, fallopian tube, breast, lung, esophageal, gastric, hepatic, and pancreatic cancers, menstruation, pregnancy, fibroids, ovarian cysts, pelvic inflammation, cirrhosis, ascites, pleural and pericardial effusions, endometriosis
• PSA Prostate cancer
Prostatitis, benign prostatic hypertrophy, prostatic trauma, after ejaculation.
Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA)
This is a glycoprotein produced by prostatic epithelium. The PSA level can be elevated in2:
• Prostate cancer
• Prostatitis
• Benign prostatic hypertrophy
• Prostatic trauma
• After ejaculation
The positive predictive value of PSA levels in prostate cancer greater than 4 ng per mL, is 20 to 30%. This rises to 50% when PSA levels exceed 10 ng per mL. Nevertheless, 20 - 30% men with prostate cancer have PSA levels within normal ranges.2Fewer than 2% men with PSA levels below 20 ng per mL have bone metastases from prostate cancer.1
CA 27.29
CA 27.29 has better sensitivity and specificity than CA 15-3, and is now the preferred tumour marker in breast cancer.
• The CA 27.29 level is elevated in approximately 33% women with early-stage breast cancer (stage I or II).
• It is also elevated in 66% women with late-stage disease (stage III or IV).3
• CA 27.29 lacks predictive value in the earliest stages of breast cancer and so has no role in screening for or diagnosing the malignancy.
• One trial has shown it may be possible to detect asymptomatic recurrence (in patients at high risk - stage II or III) after curative treatment.4 CA 27.29 was highly specific and sensitive in detecting preclinical metastasis, and this may lead to prompt imaging of probable sites of metastasis, possibly decreasing morbidity because of earlier treatment.
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
CEA is an oncofetal glycoprotein, which is expressed in normal mucosal cells and overexpressed in adenocarcinoma, especially colorectal cancer. Levels exceeding 10 ng per mL are rarely due to benign disease.5
• ≤ 25 percent of patients with disease purely within the colon have an elevated CEA level. Sensitivity increases with advancing tumour stage.
• CEA values are elevated in approximately 50 percent of patients with tumour extension to lymph nodes.
• They are elevated in 75 percent of patients with distant metastasis.6
The major role for CEA levels is in following patients for relapse after intended curative treatment of colorectal cancer.
Cancer Antigen 125 (CA 125)
CA 125 is a glycoprotein normally expressed in coelomic epithelium during fetal development. This epithelium lines body cavities and envelopes the ovaries. Elevated CA 125 values most often are associated with epithelial ovarian cancer, although levels also can be increased in other malignancies.7
• Levels are elevated in about 85% women with ovarian cancer, but in only 50% those with stage I disease. Low sensitivity limits its usefulness in ovarian cancer screening. The positive predictive value is only 20 percent, translating to five exploratory laparotomies for each ovarian cancer diagnosed. Also, survival was not improved in the women who were found through CA 125 screening to have ovarian cancer.
• Higher levels are associated with increasing bulk of disease and are highest in tumours with nonmucinous histology.7
• Multiple benign disorders also are associated with CA 125 elevations, presumably by stimulation of the serosal surfaces.8
• In postmenopausal women with asymptomatic palpable pelvic masses, CA 125 levels higher than 65 units per mL have a positive predictive value of 98 percent for ovarian cancer.1
Alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP)
This is the major protein of fetal serum, but it is usually undetectable after birth.