Tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) can help diagnose various tumors and sometimes determine the response to therapy or recurrence. An ideal tumor marker would
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Be released only from tumor tissue
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Be specific for a given tumor type
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Be detectable at low levels of tumor cell burden
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Have a direct relationship to the tumor cell burden
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Be present in all patients with the tumor
Although most tumors release detectable antigenic macromolecules
into the circulation, no tumor marker has all the requisite
characteristics to provide enough specificity or sensitivity to be used
in early diagnosis or mass cancer screening programs.
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is a protein-polysaccharide
complex present in colon carcinomas and in normal fetal intestine,
pancreas, and liver. Blood levels are elevated in patients with colon carcinoma, but the specificity is relatively low because positive results also occur in heavy cigarette smokers and in patients with cirrhosis, ulcerative colitis, and other cancers (eg, breast, pancreas, bladder, ovary, cervix).
Monitoring CEA levels may be useful for detecting cancer recurrence
after tumor excision if the patient initially had an elevated CEA and
for refining estimates of prognosis by stage.
Alpha-fetoprotein, a normal product of fetal liver cells, is also present in the sera of patients with primary hepatocellular carcinoma,
nonseminomatous germ cell tumors, and, frequently, ovarian or
testicular embryonal carcinoma. Levels are sometimes useful for
estimating prognosis or, less often, for diagnosis.
Beta subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-hCG), measured by immunoassay, is the major clinical marker in women with gestational trophoblastic neoplasia
(GTN)—a disease spectrum that includes hydatidiform mole, nonmetastatic
GTN, and metastatic GTN—and in about two thirds of men with testicular
embryonal carcinoma or choriocarcinoma. The beta subunit is measured
because it is specific for hCG. This marker is present in low levels in
healthy people. Levels are elevated during pregnancy.
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA), a glycoprotein located in
ductal epithelial cells of the prostate gland, can be detected in low
concentrations in the sera of healthy men. Using an appropriate upper
limit of normal, assays with monoclonal antibodies detect elevated serum
levels of PSA in about 90% of patients with advanced prostate cancer,
even in the absence of defined metastatic disease. It is more sensitive
than prostatic acid phosphatase. However, because PSA is elevated in
other conditions (eg, benign prostatic hypertrophy, prostatitis, recent
GU tract instrumentation), it is less specific. PSA can be used to
monitor recurrence after prostatic carcinoma has been diagnosed and
treated.
CA 125 is clinically useful for screening, diagnosing, and monitoring therapy for ovarian cancer, although any peritoneal inflammatory process and some other cancers can increase levels.
Beta-2 microglobulin is often elevated in multiple myeloma and in some lymphomas. Its primary use is in prognosis.
CA 19-9 was originally developed to detect colorectal cancer but proved more sensitive for pancreatic cancer.
It is primarily used to judge the response to treatment in patients
with advanced pancreatic cancers. CA 19-9 can also be elevated in other
GI cancers, particularly cancer of the bile ducts, and some benign bile
duct and cholestatic disorders.
CA 15-3 and CA 27-29 are elevated in most patients with metastatic breast cancer. Levels may also be elevated in other conditions. These markers are primarily used to monitor the response to therapy.
Chromogranin A is used as a marker for carcinoid
and other neuroendocrine tumors. Sensitivity and specificity for
neuroendocrine tumors can exceed 75%, and diagnostic accuracy is higher
with diffuse than with localized tumors. Levels can be elevated in other
cancers, such as lung and prostate, and some benign disorders (eg,
primary hypertension, chronic kidney disease, chronic atrophic
gastritis).
Thyroglobulin is produced by the thyroid and may be
elevated in various thyroid disorders. It is primarily used as a marker
after complete thyroidectomy to detect recurrent thyroid cancer and to monitor the response to treatment in metastatic thyroid cancer.
TA-90 is a highly immunogenic subunit of a urinary
tumor–associated antigen that is present in 70% of melanomas;
soft-tissue sarcomas; and carcinomas of the breast, colon, and lung.
Some studies have shown that TA-90 levels can accurately predict
survival and the presence of subclinical disease after surgery for
melanoma.
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