Abstract

Serum creatine kinase (CK) and lactate dehydrogenase (LD) isoenzymes were determined electrophoretically, along with various other biochemical markers of malignancy, in 19 patients with metastatic carcinoma of the prostate. Mitochondrial CK appeared in 15 patients, the CK-BB isoenzyme in 6. As a result, CK activity not inhibited by anti-M-subunit antibodies, CK non-M, was above the reference value in altogether 17 patients. There was a cathodic shift among the LD isoenzymes, significantly more prominent with increasing total LD, and a positive correlation between elevations of CK non-M and LD-5, suggesting a relation to tumour burden for both. An LD ‘flip’ (LD-1 > LD-2) was present in 10/15 patients. The frequency of CK non-M elevations was similar to — but not quantitatively correlated with—elevations of prostatic acid phosphatase and alkaline phosphatase. Thus, changes in CK and LD patterns are frequent in patients with prostatic cancer and must be taken into consideration when acute cardiac symptoms are evaluated in such patients.

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