S100 protein (S100) was assayed by particle counting immunoassay in serum samples from 50 healthy individuals, 325 patients with various neurological disorders, and 20 patients with malignant melanoma. The detection limit for this protein was 0.3 microgram/L. We detected none in healthy individuals or in 50 patients with multiple sclerosis, 23 with dementia, or 20 with meningitis. S100 was detectable in serum of only a few patients with meningoradiculitis (2/20), peripheral neuropathy (2/30), encephalitis (1/14), Guillain-Barré syndrome (1/25), or AIDS (2/20). In contrast, we observed high concentrations in 29 of 75 patients with tumors of the central nervous system, especially in meningioma (6/9), glioblastoma (9/23), and neurinoma (5/5). Values for S100 were mainly abnormally high (greater than 0.3 microgram/L) in serum from patients with cerebrovascular disorders (43/48) or with metastases of melanoma (9/11).
Pregnancy-specific beta 1-glycoprotein (SP1) was assayed by particle counting immunoassay in serum from 46 healthy female blood donors, 33 patients with benign mastopathy and 84 patients with breast cancer before operation and during follow-up. Values greater than 1 micrograms/1 were found more frequently with benign mastopathies (11/33) and in patients with breast cancer at stage 2 (20/48), 3 (4/9), and 4 (7/10) than in healthy female blood donors (3/46). The survival rate after 4 years was significantly lower in patients with SP1 level greater than 1 microgram/1 before tumor resection (52% vs. 87%). The difference remained significant when only patients in stage 2 were taken into account (57% vs. 85%). A highly significant (r = 0.64; N = 46) negative correlation was observed between the concentration of SP1 in serum and the concentration of estrogen receptor in the tumor. The longitudinal study of patients in stage 2 indicated that, of the 15 whose SP1 concentration fell below 1 microgram/1 after operation, 14 survived over 4 years whereas during the same period, 9 of the 10 patients whose SP1 value remained higher than 1 microgram/1 died.
Pregnancy-specific beta 1-glycoprotein (SP1) was assayed by particle-counting immunoassay (PACIA) with a sensitivity of 1 microgram/L. In serum from 50 men, the SP1 concentration was less than 1 microgram/L, whereas three of the specimens from 46 nonpregnant women had values exceeding 1 microgram/L. In 29% of 950 consecutive patients' sera, SP1 concentrations exceeded 1 microgram/L--in sarcoma (six of six), in malignant hemopathies (101/127, 80%) such as myeloma (20/26, 92%) and acute myeloblastic leukemia (23/27, 90%), and in various other types of cancer (11/19, 58%) except for bronchial epithelioma, which did not lead to any significant increase of SP1 in the five patients examined. The concentration of SP1 was also frequently increased in patients with Crohn's ileitis (28/43, 65%) but not in patients with other inflammatory disorders.
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