The present study was undertaken to test the parallel detectability of ovarian cancer antigen CA 125 and gastrointestinal cancer antigen CA 19-9 in the sera of patients with malignant ovarian tumors, benign ovarian tumors, endometrial cancers, cervical cancers, colorectal cancers, and trophoblastic tumors and in early 1st-trimester pregnant as well as in healthy nonpregnant controls. In all kinds of gynecologic and colorectal tumors raised concentrations of both antigens were found with the exception of malignant nonepithelial ovarian tumors where neither of the antigens showed positive reaction. The most positive cases were found in the group with epithelial ovarian cancers. Of the two antigens CA 125 was the more responsive. No positive cases were found with either of the antigens in non-pregnant healthy controls or in patients with benign ovarian tumors. The parallel determination of the two antigens gives us a better opportunity to recognize pelvic tumors and further may enable us to distinguish ovarian and colorectal tumors.
Placental protein 4 (PP-4), a recently characterized glycoprotein from human placenta, was studied using a specific double-antibody radioimmunoassay in sera of 130 volunteers, 76 ovarian tumor patients and in ovarian tumor cyst fluid and ascites of 21 patients. Elevated levels ( > 3 µg/l) were found in 45 of 52 ovarian cancer patients (86.5%). PP-4 levels correlated significantly with staging. 31 patients with malignant ovarian tumor were monitored on 2–9 occasions during 5–82 weeks. Rising or falling levels of PP-4 correlated with progression or regression of disease in 25 of 31 instances (80.6%). Elevated levels were found in 10 of 24 benign and borderline ovarian tumors. Elevated PP-4 level does not indicate malignancy in each case. PP-4 can be regarded as tumor-associated antigen and a tumor marker in oncological practice.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.