Abstract

As appropriate surgery and chemotherapy can improve both quality of life and survival of patients with ovarian adenocarcinoma, there has been a pressing need for "serodiagnostic" assays to enable close patient monitoring. CA 125 antigen has previously been described as a useful tumor marker of ovarian cancer. This is the first clinical evaluation of a radioimmunoassay using two new monoclonal antibodies, B27.1 and B43.13, that react with separate sites on the glycoprotein marker CA 125. Using the new assay, the majority of patients with clinically or radiologically detectable disease had serum CA 125 antigen levels well above the upper limit seen with random apparently healthy donors, while only three patients who were believed free of disease had elevated levels. Disease progression was associated with increasing values of serum CA 125 antigen, while response to therapy was associated with a steady decline in serum CA 125 antigen levels. Seven patients had steadily rising serum CA 125 antigen levels after initially having normal levels. The mean lead time between rise above normal and clinical or radiological evidence of relapse was 5 months (range 2 to 12 months). The merits of further surgical intervention are illustrated by the serial values of two patients followed after chemotherapy. The assay appears to have value in monitoring response to therapy and in detecting disease relapse at a time when appropriate therapeutic intervention is still possible or likely to be beneficial. Furthermore, monitoring CA 125 antigen was shown to be of benefit in assessing response to chemotherapy in a few patients with metastatic adenocarcinoma of unknown primary, and may be useful in this group of patients in determining those likely to benefit from aggressive chemotherapy.

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