In a patient with recurrent grade IV glioma of the brain resistant to conventional treatment an antibody guided isotopic scan showed uptake by the tumour of a monoclonal antibody (9A) that was developed against epidermal growth factor receptor but cross reacted with
Effective screening for occult ovarian cancer will require a strategy that is both sensitive and specific. Preliminary data suggest that CA 125 is elevated at diagnosis in a majority of patients with ovarian cancer. Although CA 125 is sufficiently specific to prompt its evaluation as one component of a strategy to detect ovarian cancer in postmenopausal women, a further improvement in specificity would facilitate cost‐effective screening. In an attempt to develop a more specific screening strategy, multiple markers were assayed in a panel of sera from 47 patients with ovarian cancer and in a separate panel of sera from 50 individuals with benign disease whose serum CA 125 levels exceeded 35 U/ml. Among the patients with ovarian cancer, elevations of CA 125 (> 35 U/ml) were observed in 91%, CA 15‐3 (> 30 U/ml) in 57%, TAG 72 (> 10 U/ml) in 49%, placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) in 25%, human milk fat globule protein (HMFG) 1 in 77%, HMFG2 in 62%, and NB/70K in 57%. Among the 50 sera selected from patients with benign disease, CA 125 was more than 35 U/ml in 100% and more than 65 U/ml in 42%. Among those patients with benign disease and elevated CA 125, NB/70K was elevated in 62%, HMFG1 in 26%, and HMFG2 in 12%, whereas TAG 72 and CA 15‐3 were elevated in only 6% and 2%, respectively. In addition PLAP appeared promising; elevated enzyme levels were not found in the benign disease group. Among patients with ovarian cancer with CA 125 levels more than 35 U/ml, either TAG 72 or CA 15‐3 was elevated in 77%. In the false‐positive group, only 6% had elevations of one or the other marker. The CA 125 levels in cancer patients were, however, substantially greater than in patients with benign disease. If sera from patients with ovarian cancer were diluted to a range comparable to that found in benign disease, at least one of the two confirmatory tests was elevated in 63% of the samples from the malignant cases. Consequently, use of CA 15‐3 and TAG 72 in combination with CA 125 can increase the apparent specificity of the CA 125 assay for distinguishing malignant from benign disease. Prospective studies will be required to test critically whether the use of additional serum markers in combination with the CA 125 assay would contribute to the specificity of a cost‐effective screening strategy for ovarian cancer.
We have used 123I-labelled epidermal growth factor (EGF) scans to study 14 patients with advanced cervical cancer. Abnormal lymph node imaging was seen most clearly 6-8 h after the injection and revealed abnormal uptake by pelvic lymph nodes in 11 patients. 4 of these 11 had abnormal computerised tomographic and ultrasound scans; in the other 7 conventional radiology did not confirm the presence of disease.
SUMMARY We describe the use of a monoclonal antibody (TAL-IB5) to HLA-D region a-chains that reacts well with HLA-D positive cells in normal and neoplastic lymphoid tissues fixed in routine fixatives and embedded in paraffin wax in the conventional fashion. This antibody should prove to be useful in routine histological investigations of lymphoid and possibly other neoplasms as well as other non-neoplastic conditions where the immune system plays an important part.
Summary A new, simple and sensitive low pH ELISA method has been developed to measure serum levels of tumour associated antigens detectable by monoclonal antibodies HMFG1 and HMFG2. We examined sera from healthy controls, patients with neoplastic and non-neoplastic conditions of breast, liver and gastrointestinal tract. The majority of patients with metastatic breast cancer had elevated serum antigens (69% HMFG1, 72% HMFG2) compared to healthy controls (6.3% HMFG1, 3.0% HMFG2) or patients with benign breast disease (17% HNFG1, 4% HMFG2). There was no discrimination using these assays between patients with neoplastic and non-neoplastic conditions of liver and gastrointestinal tract. This new method promises to be of value in the assessment and management of patients with breast cancer.
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