Abstract

The ability of malignant tissue from 50 patients with colorectal carcinoma to activate blood coagulation factor X directly was compared with samples of adjacent, macroscopically normal colonic mucosa from the same patients, and tissue from four patients with non-malignant bowel disease. The resected tissue was homogenized and incubated with purified factor X and calcium ions. The subsequent generation of activated factor X was measured spectrophotometrically with a chromogenic substrate. Results were expressed as absorbance units, and as the ratio of tumour and normal activities. Factor X-activating activity (FXAA) was present in all normal and malignant tissues tested. FXAA was significantly greater (P less than 0.001) in the tumour homogenates than in the uninvolved tissue. The tumour:normal ratio was significantly (greater than 1.2) elevated in 38 patients (76 per cent). FXAA was not correlated with the degree of differentiation of the tumour, the Dukes' classification of the disease or the exact site of the tumour. There was no difference between the FXAA content of non-involved tissue from the colorectal cancer group and colonic mucosa from patients with non-malignant bowel disease. It is concluded that colorectal carcinomas contain significantly more FXAA than adjacent, non-malignant colonic mucosa from the same subject, but there is no direct evidence for a relationship between procoagulant levels and the extent of malignancy in these patients.

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