BACKGROUNDSerologic measurement of antibodies to Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) immunoglobulin A/viral capsid antigen (IgA/VCA) and early antigen (IgA/EA) has been used widely to screen for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) in China. Recently, it was found that plasma EBV DNA concentration is an indicator for the staging and prognosis of patients with NPC. To determine whether there is a correlation between plasma EBV DNA levels and serum levels of IgA/VCA, the authors measured both in patients with NPC and in a control group.METHODSReal‐time polymerase chain reaction was used for quantitative analysis of plasma EBV DNA concentration, and enzyme‐linked immunoadsorbent assay was used to measure EBV VCA/IgA in patients with primary NPC (n = 120 patients), locally recurrent NPC (n = 8 patients), and distant metastatic NPC (n = 21 patients) among 76 patients with NPC after the completion of radiotherapy, in 60 patients with NPC in clinical remission, in 38 patients with non‐NPC tumors, and in 47 control individuals.RESULTSThe median plasma EBV DNA levels were 6200 copies/mL, 9200 copies/mL, and 2050 copies/mL in patients with primary, locally recurrent, and distant metastatic NPC, respectively, but declined to 0 copies/mL in patients with clinically remissive NPC, in patients who completed radiotherapy, in patients with non‐NPC tumors, and in the control group. In contrast, EBV VCA/IgA titers and detection rates remained high in all NPC groups. Plasma EBV DNA levels were significantly higher in patients who had serum VCA/IgA titers ≥ 1:640 (median, 83,450 copies/mL) compared with the levels in patients who had titers ≤ 1:320 (median, 17,200 copies/mL). Patients with NPC who had advanced TNM stage (Stages III and IV; median, 8530 copies/mL) and T classification (T3 and T4 tumors; median, 8530 copies/mL) had significantly higher plasma EBV DNA levels compared with patients who had early TNM stage (Stages I and II; median, 930 copies/mL) and T classification (T1 and T2 tumors; median, 3700 copies). Patients who had advanced TNM stage NPC had significantly higher mean VCA/IgA titers (1:424) compared with patients who had early TNM stage NPC (1:246), but there was no correlation between IgA/VCA titer and T or N classification of NPC.CONCLUSIONSThe results suggest that plasma EBV DNA detection is a more sensitive and specific marker than the serum IgA/VCA titer for the diagnosis and monitoring of patients with NPC. These findings provide convincing evidence for the use of plasma EBV DNA measurements for the early diagnosis and staging of NPC as well as for monitoring recurrence and metastasis of this tumor. Cancer 2004. © 2004 American Cancer Society.
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