Serum levels of cancer-associated antigen ca-195 in gastrointestinal cancers and its comparison with ca19-9
โ Scribed by Arvind K. Bhargava; Nicholas J. Petrelli; A. Karna; Philip L. Parshall; John E. Fitzpatrick; Harold O. Douglass; Lemuel Herrera; Kurt Bray; Pramod Gaur
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 618 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-8013
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โฆ Synopsis
The antibody against CA-195 binds to an epitope that consists of both Lewis A and sialylated Lewis A blood group antigen, whereas CA19-9 has shown specificity for sialylated Lewis A blood group antigen. CA19-9 and CA-195 levels were measured in the sera of 52 normal subjects; 65 benign disease patients; and 74 non-gastrointestinal, 149 colorectal, and 119 upper gastrointestinal cancer patients to correlate their levels with disease status of the patients. Low incidence and levels were found among normal subjects for both markers; however, in the benign disease group a slightly higher incidence of elevation was seen for CA19-9. Among colorectal cancer patients CA-195 appeared to show higher sensitivity for primary as well as advanced disease. Levels of both markers showed similar incidences of elevation among upper gastrointestinal cancer patients. Based on these results the contribution of Lea specificity of CA-195 cannot be ruled out, and it may be used alone or in combination with other markers for monitoring of patients with colorectal, pancreatic, gastric, gall bladder, bile duct, and liver cancers.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
CA 50 is a new tumor marker based on a monoclonal anti-carcinoid tumor, 2 cystadenocarcinomas, 2 anaplastic carcibody (MAb) against a human colorectal carcinoma cell line.The nomas, 15 poorly differentiated and 39 well-to moderately-CA 50 antigen is similar, but not identical, to the tumor different
as a separate cancer marker in patients' sera and suggests that cleavage of CA-195 and CEA epitopes from a larger precursor moiety occurs prior to secretion into the serum.
Background and Objectives: Pancreatic cancer is generally a disease with a poor prognosis, and relationship between change of serum CA 19-9 level and progression of this disease was investigated with regard to clinical pace of disease and tumor growth. Methods: CA 19-9 doubling time was examined in