A prospective study of hemostatic abnormalities in 108 cancer patients was undertken at an oncology clinic in a university teaching hospital. Tests included Quick prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, thrombin time, platelet count, modified Ivy bleeding time, fibrinogen, fibrin degradation products (FDP), euglobulin lysis time, protamine sulfate test, and factor V, VII, VIII and X assays. Ninety-eight per cent of the patients had one or more abnormal coagulation tests. The commonest abnormalities were elevated fibrin degradation products and prolonged thrombin time. Thrombocytosis occurred in 57% of patients, hyperfibrinogenemia in 46%, thrombocytopenia in 11%, and non had hypofibrinogenmia. It is suggested that platelet count, fibrinogen concentration, and serum FDP assay are the most useful tests in assessing the hemostatic abnormalities in cancer patients, although thrombin time, factor V assay, and bleeding time may also be helpful. The peripheral blood smears of 53 patients were reviewed, and only one showed microangiopathic hemolytic anemia. The data illustrate that subclinical coagulopathy is relatively frequent in patients with malignancy.
Antisera to carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), to a physicochemical subset of CEA, namely CEA‐S, and to nonspecific cross‐reacting antigen (NCA) were used for the immunohistochemical localization of these antigens in human bronchogenic carcinomas using a triple layer immunoperoxidase technique. The study is based on an analysis of tumors from 130 patients. CEA, CEA‐S, and NCA were all identified in the membrane and/or cytoplasm of neoplastic cells, and a good correlation between the antigens was observed in a majority of tumors. The presence or absence of these tumor‐associated glycoproteins appeared to be correlated with the histologic type of the tumors, especially in small cell anaplastic carcinoma and adenocarcinoma, and the degree of histologic differentiation of adenocarcinomas correlated positively with these tumor‐associated antigens. Data from this group of patients suggest that analysis of tissue CEA at the time of biopsy or surgical resection may facilitate a more objective interpretation of serial plasma CEA assays.
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