Abstract

Comparative evaluation of blood content of VEGF, sVEGFR1, and sVEGFR2 in 104 primary gastric cancer patients and 65 healthy persons was performed and associations of these markers with the principal clinical and morphological characteristics of gastric cancer were analyzed. The median levels of VEGF and sVEGFR1 in gastric cancer patients significantly surpassed the control: by 1.5 (p<0.001) and 1.2 times (p<0.01), respectively. On the contrary, sVEGFR2 level in patients was below the control (p<0.001). The best sensitivity-specificity ratio (64 and 65%, respectively) was observed for VEGF at 347 pg/ml cut-off value, which is insufficient for the use of this parameter as a clinically valuable serological marker for gastric cancer. No significant associations of these markers with the disease stage, depth of primary tumor invasion, its histological type, grade, or localization were found. The serum level of VEGF in patients with metastases to more than 7 regional lymph nodes (N3) was significantly higher than in patients without lymph node metastases (N0). Blood content of sVEGFR1 in patients with distant metastases (М+) was lower than in patients without distant metastases (М0). Thus, VEGF and its receptors circulating in the peripheral blood do not play significant diagnostic role in gastric cancer, but could be useful in monitoring and prognosis of the efficiency of antiangiogenic therapy.

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