The determination of tumor markers in urine samples has been proposed as an effective diagnostic tool in bladder cancer. The aim of the present investigation was to validate in urine samples the assay of the CYFRA21.1 cytokeratin-related marker, the serum concentrations of which showed promising diagnostic utility in patients with bladder cancer. First-voided urine samples were collected from patients with different malignancies. CYFRA21.1 was assayed with a commercially available enzyme immunoassay (Boehringer Mannheim). Different centrifugation patterns, the use of different buffers and nonionic detergents, and pH variations were evaluated. We demonstrated that: (a) cells and cell debris contain a large amount of CYFRA21.1 and must be eliminated by centrifugation; (b) storage at -20 degrees C causes amorphous precipitate, which may aspecifically bind CYFRA21.1; (c) the latter behavior may be prevented by diluting fresh urine samples with phosphate buffer with nonionic detergent added; (d) pH variations within the range 4.9-8.2 do not significantly affect CYFRA21.1 assay results. Provided that samples are diluted with buffer containing nonionic detergent, the CYFRA21.1 assay showed good precision and accuracy characteristic in urine samples. We therefore propose a standard protocol for the collection of urine samples for CYFRA21.1 assay. In a preliminary clinical evaluation, CYFRA21.1 concentrations in 16 patients with primary bladder cancer were higher than in healthy subjects. In the urine collected in the follow-up of patients treated for bladder cancer, CYFRA21.1 tended to be higher in relapsed patients than in those without evidence of disease. These preliminary data induced us to extend the clinical trial to establish the actual role of this assay in routine use.
Recently, a new immunometric assay (Cyfra 21-1) was developed to measure serum concentrations of a soluble fragment of cytokeratin subunit 19. With this method, supplied by Boehringer Mannheim (EIA Test Cyfra 21-1), an Italian multicenter trial was performed in patients with lung cancer. Cyfra 21-1 serum levels were determined in 568 normal subjects (blood donors), 607 patients with non-malignant diseases (491 respiratory diseases) and 730 patients with malignancies. In the latter group 584 had lung cancer. All these 584 patients had pathologically confirmed disease; 314 were epidermoid tumors, 166 adenocarcinomas, 88 small cell cancers and 16 large cell cancers. In the 568 healthy blood donors the mean Cyfra 21-1 value was 0.91 ng/ml (SD 0.47 ng/ml; range 0.05-2.90 ng/ml). A threshold of 1.9 ng/ml was chosen as the upper limit of normality. High levels of Cyfra 21-1 were observed in patients with chronic hepatitis (positivity rate: 17/51-33.3%) and with pancreatitis (positivity rate 5/16-31.3%). In 114 out of 491 (23.2%) patients with respiratory diseases Cyfra 21-1 showed values greater than 1.9 ng/ml. The overall sensitivity (all stages) of Cyfra 21-1 in lung cancer was 65.6% (383/584). When the histology was considered the highest positivity rates were found in patients with squamous cell tumors (226/314; 72%) followed by adenocarcinomas (105/166; 63%). In patients with SCLC the global sensitivity was 52.3% (46/88). Higher sensitivity of Cyfra 21-1 was observed from stage I to stage IV (53.9% vs 85.7%; Chi square: p < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Serum levels of tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA) are related to the proliferative activity and to the mass of the malignancy, differently from any other available tumor marker. We therefore evaluated TPA in comparison with CA15.3 and MCA (mucinous-like carcinoma-associated antigen) in patients with primary breast cancer. TPA was measured in tumor cytosol and in serum. Cytosol and serum TPA levels were not significantly correlated. Serum TPA was higher in patients with locally more advanced disease and in receptor-negative cases. The relation between TPA and disease spread was not directly dependent on tumor bulk, whereas CA15.3 and MCA were highly correlated to the number of positive lymph nodes and tumor size. No correlations were found between TPA and CA15.3 or MCA, and the positivity concordance rate between TPA and CA15.3 or MCA was very low. Patients with higher TPA serum levels showed a worse prognosis in cases with and in those without axillary metastases. From our data we conclude that TPA provides information different from that obtained with breast-specific tumor markers and could therefore be useful in association with CA15.3 and/or MCA in the management of patients with breast cancer.
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