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A Clinical Evaluation of Monoclonal (CA19-9, CA50, CA 12-5) and Polyclonal (CEA, TPA) Antibody-Defined Antigens for the Diagnosis of Pancreatic Cancer
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1988
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ImmunologyGastroenterologyPathologyBiomarker TestingImmunotherapyPancreatic CancerOncologyGastrointestinal OncologySurgical PathologyClinical EvaluationCancer ResearchSerum LevelsRadiologyHistopathologyBiliary CancerCa 12-5Pancreatic SurgeryDiagnostic AccuracyMedicine
We measured in 193 patients, admitted to our wards for symptoms and signs suggestive of pancreatic or digestive malignancy, the serum levels of five tumor-associated antigens (CA 19-9, CA 50, CA 125, TPA, CEA) and we evaluated their diagnostic accuracy both when used alone and in combination. For CA 19-9 and CA 50 a sensitivity for pancreatic cancer as high as 92 and 88%, respectively, and specificity of 91.8% were found. A lower sensitivity vs. pancreatic cancer was found for the other tumor markers, and vs. the other digestive and nondigestive malignancies for all tumor markers (apart for CA 19-9 and CA 50 vs. biliary carcinomas). As for the combined assays, the best figures were found vs. pancreatic cancer for CA 19-9 plus CA 50, CA 50 plus CEA, CA 50 plus CA 125; a sensitivity by far worse vs. the other gastrointestinal cancers was found for all the possible combinations. We conclude that in selected symptomatic patients some tumor-marker determinations can be useful in identifying those with a high probability of harboring a pancreatic cancer, to be further studied or operated upon. The clinical relevance of this in patients already symptomatic is at present unclear.