The results of a study conducted to determine the usefulness of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) monitoring in the follow-up of patients with resected colorectal cancer are reported herein. The subjects of this study were 125 patients in whom CEA had been determined preoperatively and 239 patients in whom CEA had been monitored postoperatively. The results revealed increased preoperative CEA in only 24% of the subjects, and that this increment was correlated with subsequent more advanced tumor stage and a higher recurrence rate (P < 0.01). The postoperative CEA level exceeded the threshold in 71% of the patients affected by recurrence, 94.4% of whom developed liver metastases and 50%, nonhepatic recurrence. This marker showed elevated sensitivity for liver metastases (99%), whereas the sensitivity was lower for nonhepatic recurrence of the disease (94%). Thus, we concluded that CEA monitoring can be useful for preoperative colorectal tumor grading, even if its validity in the early diagnosis of recurrence is problematic, especially in terms of radical repeated surgery and survival.
Photon emission in the visible and near ultraviolet range by samples of human tissue removed during surgery has been measured by means of a low noise photomultiplier coupled to a data acquisition system. The results show that among the 25 analyzed samples the 9 from normal tissues had an emission rate of the order of some tens of photons/cm2 min, while most of the 16 tumor tissue samples had a very much higher rate.
The authors report their experimental studies on early nutritional changes in 30 gastrectomized rats where intestinal continuity was restored by three different reconstruction methods, i.e., exclusion of the duodenum from alimentary transit (Sweet-Allen method), or duodenal recanalization (Longmire method) or double duodenal and jejunal recanalization (Moricca method). Ten sham operated rats were used as controls. Results showed that the group of rats which underwent Longmire's reconstruction presented better nutritional parameters (body weight gain, daily food intake, feeding efficiency, albuminemia) than the Moricca and Sweet-Allen reconstruction groups. These results became statistically significant when follow up was extended to 18 months by using an actuarial method. However, perioperative mortality rate was highest in the Longmire reconstruction group.
Background: The authors, evaluating the disappointing follow-up results in patients suffering from colorectal carcinoma who had undergone surgery for cure, tried a more rational follow-up. Methods: In a retrospective review about 232 patients who adhered to the follow-up protocol, we evaluated the accuracy rates of CEA, liver ultrasonography and abdominal CT. In the same group of patients, we evaluated the type of correlation between the neoplastic recurrence rate and Astler-Coller’s classification. Results: (1) In detecting hepatic metastases CEA levels furnished sensitivity and negative predictive value more than liver ultrasonography (83.3 vs. 77.8% and 98.4 vs. 98%, respectively); (2) in our series, we obtained a lower recurrence rate in classes A+B1 (7.5%) and B2 (20.8%) and higher in C1+C2 (44.4%) and D (66.7%) (p < 0.01). Conclusion: According to these data we decided to eliminate postoperative liver ultrasonography and customize follow-up protocol on tumor staging and timing of cancer relapse. The authors believe that these changes will not modify the results, but cause less psychophysical stress for the patients and reduce costs by 50%.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.