TY - JOUR
T1 - CA 19-9: Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
AU - Scara', Salvatore
AU - Bottoni, Patrizia
AU - Scatena, Roberto
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - CA19-9 (carbohydrate antigen 19-9, also called cancer antigen 19-9 or sialylated
Lewis a antigen) is the most commonly used and best validated serum tumor marker
for pancreatic cancer diagnosis in symptomatic patients and for monitoring
therapy in patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Normally synthesized by
normal human pancreatic and biliary ductal cells and by gastric, colon,
endometrial and salivary epithelia, CA 19-9 is present in small amounts in serum,
and can be over expressed in several benign gastrointestinal disorders.
Importantly, it exhibits a dramatic increase in its plasmatic levels during
neoplastic disease. However, several critical aspects for its clinical use, such
as false negative results in subjects with Lewis (a-b-) genotype and false
positive elevation, occasional and transient, in patients with benign diseases,
together with its poor positive predictive value (72.3 %), do not make it a good
cancer-specific marker and renders it impotent as a screening tool. In the last
years a large number of putative biomarkers for pancreatic cancer have been
proposed, most of which is lacking of large scale validation. In addition, none
of these has showed to possess the requisite sensitivity/specificity to be
introduced in clinical use. Therefore, although with important limitations we
well-know, CA 19-9 continues being the only pancreatic cancer marker actually in
clinical use.
AB - CA19-9 (carbohydrate antigen 19-9, also called cancer antigen 19-9 or sialylated
Lewis a antigen) is the most commonly used and best validated serum tumor marker
for pancreatic cancer diagnosis in symptomatic patients and for monitoring
therapy in patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma. Normally synthesized by
normal human pancreatic and biliary ductal cells and by gastric, colon,
endometrial and salivary epithelia, CA 19-9 is present in small amounts in serum,
and can be over expressed in several benign gastrointestinal disorders.
Importantly, it exhibits a dramatic increase in its plasmatic levels during
neoplastic disease. However, several critical aspects for its clinical use, such
as false negative results in subjects with Lewis (a-b-) genotype and false
positive elevation, occasional and transient, in patients with benign diseases,
together with its poor positive predictive value (72.3 %), do not make it a good
cancer-specific marker and renders it impotent as a screening tool. In the last
years a large number of putative biomarkers for pancreatic cancer have been
proposed, most of which is lacking of large scale validation. In addition, none
of these has showed to possess the requisite sensitivity/specificity to be
introduced in clinical use. Therefore, although with important limitations we
well-know, CA 19-9 continues being the only pancreatic cancer marker actually in
clinical use.
KW - tumor marker
KW - tumor marker
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/101378
U2 - 10.1007/978-94-017-7215-0_15
DO - 10.1007/978-94-017-7215-0_15
M3 - Article
VL - 867
SP - 247
EP - 260
JO - Advances in experimental medicine and biology
JF - Advances in experimental medicine and biology
ER -