Abstract

Pancreatic cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the western world. Patients with pancreatic cancer have poor prognosis, partly due to difficulties in detecting it at early stages. While different markers have been associated with pancreatic cancer, many of them show suboptimal sensitivity and specificity. Serum autoantibodies against tumor-associated antigens have recently emerged as early stage biomarkers for different types of cancers. Given the urgent need for early and reliable biomarkers for pancreatic cancer, we undertook a systematic review of the published literature to identify primary articles that evaluated serum autoantibodies in pancreatic cancer detection by searching PubMed and ISI Web of Knowledge. Two reviewers extracted data on study characteristics and results independently. Overall, 31 studies evaluating 124 individual serum autoantibodies in pancreatic cancer detection met the inclusion criteria. In general, single autoantibody markers showed relatively low sensitivities at high specificity. A combination of markers, either multiple serum autoantibodies or serum autoantibodies combined with tumor-associated markers, led to a better diagnostic performance. However, most of the analyzed autoantibodies have only been reported in single studies and therefore need to be independently validated. We conclude that serum autoantibodies might present an option as biomarkers for early detection of pancreatic cancer, but more work is needed to identify and validate autoantibody signatures that are associated with early stage pancreatic cancer.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer related deaths and represents a serious health problem

  • One of the reasons for the poor prognosis is that most patients have locally advanced or metastatic cancer at time of diagnosis. 53% of patients are diagnosed at late stages with a 5-year survival rate of 2%, but even for the 9% percent of patients that are diagnosed with local cancer the 5-year relative survival rate is only 24% [1]

  • We provide here a systematic review of the published literature to identify articles that have looked at serum autoantibodies in pancreatic cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer related deaths and represents a serious health problem. There have been many tumor-associated markers described for pancreatic cancer. The immune system reacts to developing tumors and generates autoantibodies against tumorassociated antigens (TAA) This has led to a search for serological autoantibodies and their respective antigens in different types of cancers [8, 9]. Recent work supports that serum autoantibodies may be suitable biomarkers that can be used either alone or in combination with tumor associated markers or other autoantibodies for detection of cancers [8, 9]. We report the key aspects of the study design and population characteristics, the sensitivity and specificity of the investigated autoantibodies and marker combinations performed to provide a review of where the field stands at this stage

Results
Discussion
Literature search
Conflicts of Interest
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