Erschienen in:
01.07.2007 | Original Paper
Peritoneal lavage CEA/CA125 is a prognostic factor for gastric cancer patients
verfasst von:
Manabu Yamamoto, Hideo Baba, Yasushi Toh, Takeshi Okamura, Yoshihiko Maehara
Erschienen in:
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology
|
Ausgabe 7/2007
Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten
Abstract
Background
We recently found an elevation in the pre-operative peritoneal lavage carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) level to be associated with an earlier detection of recurrent peritoneal dissemination and a poor prognosis.
Method
Two hundred and twenty-nine patients with gastric cancer were intraoperatively measured for tumor markers, CEA and CA125 based on peritoneal lavage using a chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay.
Results
The patients were divided into four groups. (A) The peritoneal lavage CEA (−) CA125 (−) group (CEA < 0.4 ng/ml, CA125 < 200 ng/ml, n = 129); (B) the peritoneal lavage CEA (−) CA125 (+) group (CEA < 0.4 ng/ml, CA125 ≧ 200 ng/ml, n = 50); (C) the peritoneal lavage CEA (+) CA125 (−) group (CEA ≧ 0.4 ng/ml, CA125 < 200 ng/ml, n = 18); and (D) the peritoneal lavage CEA (+) CA125 (+) group (CEA ≧ 0.4 ng/ml, CA125 ≧ 200 ng/ml, n = 32). The 5-year survival of the patients in groups C and D was 40 and 26%, respectively, which was lower than that of the patients in any other group (group A, B; p < 0.0001). Recurrent sites were both peritoneal dissemination and lymph node/liver in group C, while those were only peritoneal dissemination in group D.
Conclusion
This combined analysis of these markers is therefore considered to be helpful method to accurately estimate the recurrent sites and prognosis for advanced gastric cancer patients.