Cancer is often associated with abnormal activation of coagulation leading to a prothrombotic state. Some chemotherapeutic agents used for cancer may induce thrombosis but their biological alterations in the hemostatic system are not yet well understood. This study evaluated alterations of coagulative and fibrinolytic parameters following chemotherapy. In plasma samples of 38 patients (median age: 49 years) receiving CMF (schedule 1-21 or 1-8) for Stage II breast cancer, we evaluated: PT, aPTT, antithrombin III (AT-III), protein C (PC), protein S (PS), thrombin-antithrombin complex (TAT), prothrombin fragment F 1 + 2 (F 1 + 2), fibrinogen (Fbg), tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) and D-dimer (D-D). PT, aPTT, and Fbg were determined with routine methods; AT-III, PC, and PS were measured with coagulative tests; PC and PS were also evaluated with immunoenzymatic methods, t-PA, PAI-1, D-D, TAT, and F 1 + 2 were measured with immunoenzymatic methods. All tests were performed immediately before starting therapy and after each cycle. A PC antigen decrease appeared soon after beginning therapy and lasted throughout chemotherapy. The lowest values were present after the first treatment both in the CMF 1-21 group (mean +/- SD = 72.5 +/- 10.8%) and in the CMF 1-8 group (mean +/- SD = 77.2 +/- 6.9%): PC activity was also decreased. PS antigen decreased after the first administration (mean +/- SD = 73.3 +/- 10% in CMF 1-21 group, and 72.5 +/- 4.9% in CMF 1-8 group): PS activity also decreased. PAI-1 antigen levels increased (mean +/- SD = 43.1 +/- 20.4 ng/ml in the CMF 1-21 group, and 37.5 +/- 12.2 ng/ml in CMF 1-8 group) lasting up to the last cycle. CMF provokes a trend toward hypercoagulability; this effect should be considered when chemotherapy is employed in advanced cancer patients at high risk for thrombosis, or in patients with other risk factors.
Our results suggest that D-dimer can serve as a sensitive indicator to monitor the extent and course of the disease in ovarian cancer patients. The patient follow-up is ongoing to establish the predictive value of D-dimer measurement with respect to prognosis.
CA 125 serum levels were measured in 74 patients with ovarian carcinoma. Among 31 patients undergoing a second look laparotomy (SL) after chemotherapy pathologic complete response (PCR) was observed in 14 patients, residual disease (RD) less than 2 cm in 7 patients and RD greater than 2 cm in 10 patients. The disease status was compared to the CA 125 serum levels measured just before SL. Thirteen of the 14 patients with PCR had serum CA 125 values less than 35 U/ml (specificity: 93%). On the other hand, only 10 of the 17 patients with RD showed serum levels greater than 35 U/ml (sensitivity: 59%). Moreover, in the 43 patients receiving chemotherapy, CA 125 levels correlated with the course of the disease in 36 (84%). With regard to early detection of recurrence, in 9/14 patients with PCR, whose CA 125 levels were monitored monthly, by 1 to 7 months an increase of the tumor marker preceded clinical evidence of relapse in 9/9 relapses (100%). In conclusion, CA 125 assay can be helpful in the management of ovarian cancer patients, in monitoring the response to chemotherapy, in the early detection of tumor recurrence, and in predicting the SL findings, although the low sensitivity could be a major drawback in patients with RD before SL.
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