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Review oncology CA-125 and ovarian cancer: benefit, control and anxiety for patients or clinicians? A. Coupe, J.-F. Baurain, M. Berlière, T. Connerotte, N. Whenham, L. Duck Cancer antigen (CA)-125 is considered as a specific tumourmarker of ovarian cancer. After normalization due to treatment, CA-125 serum increase often precedes clinical recurrence. The dosage of this marker is linked to great anxiety for both patients and clinicians. This article provides information about its sensitivity and specificity in determining cancer recurrence. Furthermore, whether or not to re-treat a patient with an isolated increase of CA-125 without clinical symptoms, is discussed in the light of a recent phase III MRC/EORTC trial. (Belg J Med Oncol 2010;4:151-4) Introduction Cancer antigen (CA)-125, also known as mucin 16 or MUC16 was first recognized in 1981. MUC16 is a member of the mucin family glycoproteins, expressed in adult tissue of coelomic epithelial origin.1 CA-125 is applied as a biomarker in the blood of patients with cancer, especially ovarian cancer. The serum CA-125 level is elevated in over 80% of patients with advanced epithelial (papillary serous, endometrioid, mucinous, clear-cell) ovarian cancer (EOC). Papillary serous carcinoma is the most frequent type and is often associated with elevated CA-125. On the other hand, mucinous ovarian carcinomas, ovarian germ cells, and stromal tumors are not associated with high levels of CA-125. However, high serum CA-125 level is not specific for advanced EOC and may also be elevated under other malignant conditions, such as pancreatic, breast, lung, gastric, and colon cancers and even under various other conditions, such as pregnancy, endometriosis, adenomyosis, uterine fibroids, pelvic inflammatory disease, menstruation and benign cysts.2 CA-125 as a screening tool in healthy women Ovarian cancer is well-known for its frequent discovery at an advanced stage. At that stage, chances to cure the patients are limited. CA-125 is elevated in less than 50% of stage I ovarian cancers and as discussed above, the specificity of the test is poor. Measurement of CA-125 values in an individual patient over time (rather than a single measurement) appears to improve the estimation of a patient’s risk of ovarian cancer. An algorithm has been developed calculating the Risk of Ovarian Cancer (ROC) based on serial CA-125. Value of the algorithm is currently being Authors: Mrs. A. Coupe, MD, Department of Surgery, Gynaecology, Clinique St-Pierre, Ottignies LLN, Mr. J.-F. Baurain, MD, PhD, Centre du Cancer, Medical Oncology, Cliniques Universitaires St-Luc, Brussels, Mrs. Berlière, MD, PhD, Centre du Cancer, GynaecologyObstetrics, Cliniques Universitaires St-Luc, Brussels, Mr. T. Connerotte, MD, Mr. N. Whenham, MD, Mr. L. Duck, MD, Department of Internal Medicine, Onco-Haematology Unit, Clinique St-Pierre, Ottignies LLN, Belgium. Please send all correspondence to: Lionel Duck, MD, Head of Onco-Hematology Unit, Clinique St-Pierre, Av. Reine Fabiola 9, 1340 Ottignies LLN, Belgium, e-mail: [email protected] Conflict of interest: the authors have nothing to disclose and indicate no conflicts of interest. Key words: CA-125, ovarian cancer, tumourmarker Belgian Journal of Medical Oncology volume 4, issue 4, 2010 151 4 Review oncology evaluated in a trial with 202,638 postmenopausal women between the ages of 50 and 74 years deemed to be at average risk for ovarian cancer (United Kingdom Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening). Women were randomized to undergo annual pelvic examination (control group), annual transvaginal ultrasonography (ultrasonography group) or annual measurement of CA-125 (evaluated over time with the use of the ROC algorithm) plus transvaginal ultrasonography in cases with elevated CA-125 level (multimodality group). In a preliminary report, multimodality screening had a significantly greater specificity (99.8% versus 98.2%) and a higher positive predictive value (35.1% versus 2.8%, p<0.001), as compared to just ultrasonography. Sensitivity did not differ significantly between the 2 groups. Another large-scale trial whose results are expected in 2014, is ongoing (the Prostate, Lung, Colon, and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial). So far, no clear recommendation can be made for such a screening, given the lack of data concerning its cost, its impact on survival, and its potential harmful surgical complications for women with false-positive results.3,4 CA-125 as a prognostic tool during primary chemotherapy Tumour stage, residual disease after initial surgery, histological type and tumour grade are the most important clinical-pathological factors related to the clinical outcome of patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. If the Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors (RECIST)-method is a standard method for evaluating the response to further treatment, one may ask if decrease of blood CA-125 may also serve as a surrogate response marker. According to Rustin et al., CA-125 monitoring can be valuable if pre-treatment level was at least twice the normal upper limit and was performed within 2 weeks prior to start of treatment.5 A threshold of a 50% reduction in CA-125 level compared to pre-treatment value can be used as a response criterium. The response must be confirmed and maintained for at least 28 days. For patients with advanced ovarian cancer and an elevated CA-125, data also show that the timing of normalization of CA-125 during primary chemotherapy is predictive of survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. In Rocconi et Belgian Journal of Medical Oncology 152 al., patients achieving normalization of CA-125 by their third cycle of chemotherapy were compared to patients failing to achieve normalization by their third cycle.6 Patients with early normalization demonstrated improved progression-free survival (19 versus 6 months; p<0.001), overall survival (48 versus 27 months; p<0.001) and platinum sensitivity (78 versus 22%; p<0.001). This survival advantage was maintained when patients were evaluated by debulking status. However, if CA-125 does not reach normal values, the importance of early modification of chemotherapy has to be defined. CA-125 monitoring after treatment ESMO guidelines (clinical recommendations) state that “history and physical examination (including pelvic examination) should be performed every 3 months for 2 years, every 4 months during the third year and every 6 months during years 4 and 5 or until progression is documented. CA-125 can accurately predict tumour relapse (level IA evidence) and may be performed at follow-up visits. It is unknown, however, whether the early detection of recurrence by CA-125 offers any advantage. CT scans should be performed if there is clinical or CA-125 evidence of progressive disease. FDG-PET-CT scans may be superior to CT scans in detecting small volume operable relapses (level IIIB evidence)”.7 Follow-up studies show that elevated CA-125 with clinical (pelvic) examination has a sensitivity of more than 90% in detecting EOC recurrence. This percentage is probably lower for non-serous (mucinous and clear-cell) carcinomas and for CA-125-negative tumours at diagnosis. Median time from increased CA-125 to clinical relapse is 2-6 months.8 But which CA-125 cut-off value may predict relapse after complete remission? For the Gynaecologic Cancer Intergroup (GCIG), CA-125 criteria, doubling in CA-125 from the normal upper limit reliably predicts objective progression. For those patients whose CA-125 had never fallen back to the normal range, a doubling from the nadir has been shown to predict progression with a false-positive rate of <2% and a high sensitivity.9 For some CA-125 non-secreting tumours, diagnosing recurrent ovarian cancer with single-detector spiral Computer Tomography has a sensitivity depending on size, ranging from 25-50% for infracentimetric volume 4, issue 4, 2010 Key messages for clinical practice 1. 2. Cancer antigen (CA)-125 can not be used as yet as a standard detection tool in healthy women. CA-125 decrease under primary chemotherapy may serve as a predictive tool for early response to chemotherapy, and as a prognostic factor. 3. Rising CA-125 is a sensitive and specific surrogate marker of progression, based on validated criteria (GCIG). 4. Rising CA-125 may predict early progression in 25-75% of patients before clinical progression (clinical/CT). 5. CT (or PET) is not a routine follow-up tool, perhaps except for the follow-up of poorly secreting CA-125 ovarian tumours. 6. A recent MRC/EORTC trial did not show a survival advantage for the early treatment of relapse based on CA-125 level alone, versus delayed treatment based on conventional clinical indicators. lesions to 85-93% for supracentimetric lesions. Multidetector CT’s enhance the performance. PET may help but sensitivity may be very low for subcentimetric lesions and omental lesions. PET is better for visceral surface lesions, normal-sized nodes and supradiaphragmatic lesions. PET-CT may reach a 93% sensitivity and 96% specificity when correlated to imaging and histology.10,11 How to manage first CA-125 increase? Even if professionals would have been in agreement on treating patients with both increased CA-125 and clinical symptoms due to recurrent cancer, it was still unclear until recently if asymptomatic patients, even with an elevated CA-125, should immediately receive treatment. In the era of Internet, consulting patients are anxious and wait for their marker, hoping it will stay normal. Policy of continuation of CA-125 monitoring invites the major problem of patient “addiction” to CA-125 results. Increase of CA-125 may be felt as drama for patients. For clinicians, it is sometimes difficult to decide “what to do next”: re-treat an asymptomatic patient immediately or wait for symptoms of the disease? For patients relapsing after a long disease-free Belgian Journal of Medical Oncology interval (>1 year), the decision seems even harder, because these patients may be candidates for a secondary surgical cytoreduction (SCR). Complete SCR and better survival are associated with long diseasefree interval, good performance status, absence of ascites, low FIGO stage and no residual tumour after first surgery. Outcome is directly related to volume of relapsed disease. Three studies, but not all, show that CA-125 level before SCR is a factor influencing survival. Some authors have hypothesized that, in appropriately selected patients, early identification of macroscopic recurrent disease may facilitate complete surgical cytoreduction and even survival; but this hypothesis should be prospectively validated.12,13 At the 2009 ASCO meeting, a large phase III randomized trial (jointly conducted by the Medical Research Council and the European Organisation for the Research and Treatment of Cancer) addressed this question.14 This study compared early treatment of relapse based on just CA-125 level to delayed treatment based on conventional clinical indicators. Women with ovarian cancer in clinical complete remission after primary platinum-based chemotherapy and a normal CA-125 were registered. CA-125 was measured every 3 months but patients and volume 4, issue 4, 2010 153 4 Review oncology investigators were blinded to the results, which were only monitored by the trial units. If CA-125 levels exceeded twice the upper limit of normal, patients were randomized to either immediate treatment or to continue having blinded CA-125 measurements with treatment commencing when clinical or symptomatic recurrence appeared. From 1,442 registered patients, 527 were randomized. Patients in the earlytreatment group started secondary chemotherapy 4.8 months earlier than the delayed-treatment group. The secondary therapy was well balanced over the 2 arms. With a median follow-up of 49 months from randomization and a total of 351 deaths, there was no evidence of a difference in overall survival between the immediate and delayed arms (HR 1.01, 95% CI 0.82-1.25, p=0.91). This study demonstrates that there is no survival advantage to treating patients on a rising CA-125 compared to an expectative policy until the development of symptoms. Although this trial provides strong evidence against frequent CA-125 testing, some clinicians may still hesitate to discontinue routine CA-125 measurement: the trial took place during a 10-year period (1996-2006) when the options for treatment were relatively limited; trial did not address the issue of early detection of surgically resectable recurrence. The era of targeted therapy has now arrived, and thus paradigms of ovarian cancer treatment may change.15 References 1. Yin BW, Lloyd KO. Molecular cloning of the CA-125 ovarian cancer antigen:identification as a new mucin, MUC16. J Biol Chem 2001;276:27371-5. 2 Cannistra SA. Cancer of the ovary. N Engl J Med 2004;351:2519-29. 3. Clarke-Pearson DL. Screening for ovarian cancer. N Engl J Med 2009;361:170-7. 4. Menon U, Gentry-Maharaj A, Hallett R, et al. Sensitivity and specificity of multimodal and ultrasound screening for ovarian cancer, and stage distribution of detected cancers: results of the prevalence screen of the UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS). Lancet Oncol 2009;10:327-40. 5. Rustin G, Quinn M, Thigpen T, et al. Re: New Guidelines to Evaluate the Response to Treatment in Solid Tumors (Ovarian Cancer). JNCI 2004;96:487-8. 6. Rocconi RP, Matthews KS, Kemper MK, et al. The timing of normalization of CA-125 levels during primary chemotherapy is predictive of survival in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. Gynecol Oncol 2009;114:242-5. 7. Aebi S, Castiglione M, et al. Newly and relapsed epithelial ovarian carcinoma: ESMO Clinical Recommendations for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up. Ann Oncol 2009;20:21-3. 8. Van der Burg ME, Lammes FB, Verweij J. The role of CA-125 in the early diagnosis of progressive disease in ovarian cancer. Ann Oncol 1990;1:301-2. 9. Vergote I, Rustin G, Eisenhauer EA, et al. Re: New guidelines to evaluate the response to treatment in solid tumors [Ovarian Cancer]. JNCI 2000;92:1534-5. 10. Pannu HK, Bristow RE, Montz FJ, et al. Multidetector CT of peritoneal carcinomatosis from ovarian cancer. Radiographics 2003;23:687-701. 11. Pannu HK, Bristow RE, Cohade C, et al. PET-CT in recurrent ovarian cancer: initial observations. Radiographics 2004;24:209-23. 12. Oksefjell H, Sandstad B, Tropé C.The role of secondary cytoreduction in the management of the first relapse in epithelial ovarian cancer. Ann Oncol Conclusion Usually, CA-125 is a sensitive marker for early ovarian cancer progression after primary treatment. Until recently, clinicians frequently followed CA-125 for detection of recurrence, and treated patients before symptoms had developed. The recent MRC/EORTC OV05/5595 trial clearly showed that frequent CA-125 testing and early treatment, based on CA-125 increase only, are not useful. Obviously, patients will keep high expectations concerning their marker, but oncologists need to inform and educate patients. Belgian Journal of Medical Oncology 154 2009;20:286-93. 13. Panici BP, De Vivo A, Bellati F, et al. Secondary cytoreductive surgery in patients with platinum-sensitive recurrent ovarian cancer. Ann Surg Oncol 2007;14:1136-42. 14. Rustin GJ, Van der Burg ME, on behalf of MRC and EORTC Collaborators. A randomized trial in ovarian cancer (OC) of early treatment of relapse based on CA-125 level alone versus delayed treatment based on conventional clinical indicators (MRC OV05/EORTC 55955 trials). J Clin Oncol 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting Proceedings;27:No 18S. 15. Kaye SB. Should Routine CA-125 screening be discontinued? ASCO news and forum. 2010. Available at: www.asconews.org volume 4, issue 4, 2010