Does serum CA125 have clinical value for follow-up monitoring of postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian cancer? Results of a 12-year study

Similar documents
3 Summary of clinical applications and limitations of measurements

CT findings in patients with Cabazitaxel induced pelvic pain and haematuria: a case series

EDUCATIONAL COMMENTARY CA 125. Learning Outcomes

FDG-PET/CT in Gynaecologic Cancers

Hongfei Gao 1, Lijun Yuan 2 and Yimin Han 1*

ORIGINAL ARTICLE CA-125 AS A SURROGATE MARKER IN A CLINICAL AND HISTOPATHOLOGICAL STUDY OF PELVIC MASS AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL

The role of CA 125 in epithelial ovarian carcinoma

Ovarian cancer antigen CA125: A prospective clinical

MPH Quiz. 1. How many primaries are present based on this pathology report? 2. What rule is this based on?

Triage of Ovarian Masses. Andreas Obermair Brisbane

Role of peritoneal washing cytology in ovarian malignancies: correlation with histopathological parameters

Focus on... Ovarian cancer. HE4 & ROMA score

Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University Optimizing First Line Treatment of Advanced Ovarian Cancer

Takashi Yagisawa 1,2*, Makiko Mieno 1,3, Norio Yoshimura 1,4, Kenji Yuzawa 1,5 and Shiro Takahara 1,6

The diagnostic value of determination of serum GOLPH3 associated with CA125, CA19.9 in patients with ovarian cancer

Surgical management and neoadjuvant chemotherapy for stage III-IV ovarian cancer

The Value of CA 125 and CA72-4 in Management of Patients with Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Clear cell carcinoma arising from abdominal wall endometriosis: a unique case with bladder and lymph node metastasis

Screening and prevention of ovarian cancer

Staging recurrent ovarian cancer with 18 FDG PET/CT

Sarah Burton. Lead Gynae Oncology Nurse Specialist Cancer Care Cymru

What is endometrial cancer?

POLICY PRODUCT VARIATIONS DESCRIPTION/BACKGROUND RATIONALE DEFINITIONS BENEFIT VARIATIONS DISCLAIMER CODING INFORMATION REFERENCES POLICY HISTORY

Multimodal approach to predict ovarian malignancy prior to laparoscopy

Clinical study of a CT evaluation model combined with serum CA125 in predicting the treatment of newly diagnosed advanced epithelial ovarian cancer

BACKGROUND. The objective of this study was to determine the impact of malignant

CA 125 and Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: Role in Screening, Diagnosis, and Surveillance

Gynecologic Cancer Surveillance and Survivorship: Informing Practice and Policy

CAN PREOPERATIVE CA-125 PREDICT RESECTABILITY OF TUMOR IN PATIENTS WITH ADVANCED EPITHELIAL OVARIAN CARCINOMA?

Prediction of a high-risk group based on postoperative nadir CA-125 levels in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer

Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

Risk of Malignancy Index in the Preoperative Evaluation of Patients with Adnexal Masses among Women of Perimenopausal and Postmenopausal Age Group

Torsion bottle, a very simple, reliable, and cheap tool for a basic scoliosis screening

Prof. Dr. Aydın ÖZSARAN

Anshuma Bansal 1 Bhavana Rai

Primary Fallopian Tube Cancer : A Rare Gynecological Malignancy

RESEARCH ARTICLE. Hariyono Winarto*, Bismarck Joel Laihad, Laila Nuranna. Abstract. Introduction

Ligation of lymph vessels for the treatment of recurrent inguinal lymphoceles following lymphadenectomy

Subdural hemorrhages in acute lymphoblastic leukemia: case report and literature review

Staging and Treatment Update for Gynecologic Malignancies

OVARIAN CARCINOMA Immune Therapy. Antibodies to CA-125 (Ovarex) Vaccine therapy

DIAGNOSTIC SIGNIFICANCE OF CHANGES IN SERUM HUMAN EPIDIDYMIS EPITHELIAL SECRETORY PROTEIN 4 AND CARBOHYDRATE ANTIGEN 125 IN ENDOMETRIAL CARCINOMA

Gynecologic Cancers are many diseases. Gynecologic Cancers in the Age of Precision Medicine Advances in Internal Medicine. Speaker Disclosure:

Gynecologic Cancers are many diseases. Speaker Disclosure: Gynecologic Cancer Care in the Age of Precision Medicine. Controversies in Women s Health

How to Recognize Gynecologic Cancer Cells from Pelvic Washing and Ascetic Specimens

Elastography, a sensitive tool for the evaluation of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with high grade serous ovarian carcinoma

Jemal A, Siegel R, Ward E, et al: Cancer statistics, CA: Cancer J Clin 59(4):225-49, 2009

Ascites regression following neoadjuvant chemotherapy in prediction of treatment outcome among stage IIIc to IV high-grade serous ovarian cancer

Clinical statistics of gynecologic cancers in Japan

Increased human epididymis protein 4 in benign gynecological diseases complicated with chronic renal insufficiency patients

Biological intensity-modulated radiotherapy plus neoadjuvant chemotherapy for multiple peritoneal metastases of ovarian cancer: A case report

Clinical guideline Published: 27 April 2011 nice.org.uk/guidance/cg122

Is CA-125 the Leading Biomarker in Determining Early-Onset Ovarian Cancer Diagnosis in 2016?

CA125 in the diagnosis of ovarian cancer: the art in medicine

Appendix cancer mimicking ovarian cancer

PDF hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University Nijmegen

Tetsuro Yahata, Chiaki Banzai, Kenichi Tanaka and Niigata Gynecological Cancer Registry

Human epididymal protein 4 The role of HE4 in the management of patients presenting with pelvic mass Publication abstracts

Impact of fasting on 18 F-fluorocholine gastrointestinal uptake and detection of lymph node metastases in patients with prostate cancer

Squamous cell carcinoma arising in a dermoid cyst of the ovary: a case series

Screening for ovarian cancer Kehoe, Sean

Symptoms and signs associated with benign and malignant proximal fibular tumors: a clinicopathological analysis of 52 cases

SIMULTANEOUS MEASUREMENTS OF DIFFERENT TUMOR MARKERS FOR EARLY DETECTION OF OVARIAN CANCER

A developed by hybridization of spleen cells from mice

Article begins on next page

Pre-operative assessment of patients for cytoreduction and HIPEC

Pleural effusion as an initial manifestation in a patient with primary pulmonary monoclonal B-cell lymphocyte proliferative disease

The updated incidences and mortalities of major cancers in China, 2011

PET/CT in Gynaecological Cancers. Stroobants Sigrid, MD, PhD Departement of Nuclear Medicine University Hospital,Antwerp

HE4 Human Epididymal Protein 4 A novel oncological biomarker improving ovarian cancer care

Improving quality of care for patients with ovarian and endometrial cancer Eggink, Florine

Stage 3 ovarian cancer survival rate

CASE STUDY. Presented by: Jessica Pizzo. CFCC Sonography student Class of 2018

Chapter 8 Adenocarcinoma

Pre-operative Evaluation and Implications

Because ovarian cancer is usually diagnosed

Interactive Staging Bee

Treatment and prognosis of type B2 thymoma

Is It Time To Implement Ovarian Cancer Screening?

Predictive value of CA 125 and CA 72-4 in ovarian borderline tumors

Combined use of AFP, CEA, CA125 and CAl9-9 improves the sensitivity for the diagnosis of gastric cancer

FoROMe Lausanne 6 février Anita Wolfer MD-PhD Cheffe de clinique Département d Oncologie, CHUV

from 5 patients with definite evidence of disease but with negative HMFG1, HMFG2 and CA125 levels were tested in a further assay measuring serum

Laparoscopic versus laparotomic surgery for adnexal masses: role in elderly

Characterizing Adnexal Masses: Pearls and Pitfalls 20 th Annual Summer Practicum SCBT-MR Jackson Hole August 11, 2010

Annual report of the Committee on Gynecologic Oncology, the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Analysis of Prognosis and Prognostic Factors of Cervical Adenocarcinoma and Adenosqumous Carcinoma of the Cervix

Impact of Surgery Extent on Survival and Recurrence Rate of Stage ⅠEndometrial Adenocarcinoma

Metachronous solitary splenic metastasis arising from early gastric cancer: a case report and literature review

PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF SERUM CA-125 IN PATIENTS WITH ADVANCED EPITHELIAL OVARIAN CANCER FOLLOWED BY COMPLETE REMISSION AFTER ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY

What is ovarian cancer?

Annual report of Gynecologic Oncology Committee, Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2013

Trial record 1 of 1 for:

Thrombocytosis as a Predictor of Malignancy in Patients with a Pelvic Mass Najwa Al-Nakaash Miami Abd Al-Hasan Wasan Ghazi MRCOG FICOG MBChB

Prognostic factors in adult granulosa cell tumors of the ovary: a retrospective analysis of 80 cases

FDG-PET Findings in an Ovarian Endometrioma: A Case Report

SCREENING FOR OVARIAN CANCER DR MACİT ARVAS

ORIGINAL ARTICLE. Oncology and Translational Medicine DOI /s Abstract

The diagnostic, prediction of postoperative recurrence and prognostic value of HE4 in epithelial ovarian cancer

CA-125 indicated asymptomatic relapse confers survival benefit to ovarian cancer patients who underwent secondary cytoreduction surgery

Transcription:

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 DOI 10.1186/s13048-017-0310-y RESEARCH Does serum CA125 have clinical value for follow-up monitoring of postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian cancer? Results of a 12-year study Na Guo and Zhilan Peng * Open Access Abstract Background: The detection of CA125 has been used in the follow up of ovarian cancer. At present, some scholars believe that serum CA125 has no clinical value for the follow-up monitoring the recurrence for postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian cancer, but in our clinical follow-up found that when the serum CA125 value is <35 U/ml, postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma had already showed recurrent lesions in some ecological and imaging examinations or in laparotomy exploration and biopsy, and we given the patients timely treatment, the prognosis were improved. Methods: Retrospective analysis the values of serum CA125 of 342 postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma, consisting of 296 non-recurrent and 46 recurrent cases, as well as 3175 cases of menopausal women and 603 cases of postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor for the follow-up from January 2005 to December 2016. Results: The median value of CA125 for non-recurrent patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma is 8.9 U/ml, the median value of CA125 for non-recurrent patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma is 29.7 U/ml; for menopausal women, 8.1 U/ml; and for postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor, 7.2 U/ml, whereas the mean ± standard deviation is 9.0 ± 1.9 U/ml, 31.3 ± 16.2U/ml, 8.0 ± 1.1 U/ml, and 6.8 ± 2.1 U/ml, respectively. Conclusions: If the value of the CA125 for postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma between 10 and 35 U/ml indicates a relative risk of recurrence. When the value of CA125 is higher than 10 U/ml and continuously increased, need to be vigilant and should be combined with imaging examination (PET-CT). This result may improve the prognosis for recurrent patients because of the early detection of recurrent lesions and early retreatment. Keywords: Epithelial ovarian cancer, Serum CA125, Follow-up, Recurrence Background CA125 is a glycoprotein antigen recognized using OVCA433 as the antigen for preparing the murine monoclonal antibody OC125 in epithelial ovarian carcinoma. It was first reported by the American scientist Bast in 1981 [1]. The detection of CA 125 has become an * Correspondence: guona507@aliyun.com Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Key laboratory of Birth Detects and Related Diseases of Women and Children(Sichuan University), Ministry of Education, West China Second University Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610041, China effective way to diagnose ovarian epithelial carcinoma and to monitor its condition changes over the years. In 2003, the Gynecologic Oncology Branch of the Chinese Medical Association developed the following standard indicators for the diagnosis and treatment of recurrent ovarian malignant tumor: (1) increased tumor markers, (2) appearance of ascites and pleural effusion, (3) mass revealed by physical examination, (4) tumor revealed by imaging examination, and (5) unknown cause of intestinal obstruction. The presence of one indicator suggests The Author(s). 2017 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Page 2 of 7 recurrence, whereas the presence of two or more indicates tumor recurrence [2]. Observation of the dynamic change in CA125 to monitor the recurrence of epithelial ovarian carcinoma is widely used in clinics, At present, some scholars believe that serum CA125 has no clinical value for the follow-up monitoring the recurrence for postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian cancer [3], they established the benefits of early treatment on the basis of increased CA125 concentrations compared with delayed treatment on the basis of clinical recurrence, the result showed no evidence of a survival benefit with early treatment of relapse on the basis of a raised CA125 concentration alone. In their treatment, the patients were only treated by chemotherapy, but not surgery. It is known that ovarian cancer is mainly treated by surgery, our clinical follow-up found that when the serum CA125 value is <35 U/ml, some postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma who underwent cytoreductive or radical surgery and chemotherapy show recurrent lesions in gynecological and imaging examinations or in laparotomy exploration and biopsy, early detected the lesions, the patients had the opportunity for surgery, the prognosis were improvement and the survival time were prolonged. The present study aims to observe the dynamic monitoring of serum CA125 values in postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma with timely imaging examination, early detection of small recurrent lesions, early treatment, improvement of treatment effect, and prolonged survival time. Methods The subjects of this investigation are 342 patients treated from January 2005 to December 2016 who have been diagnosed with epithelial ovarian carcinoma by pathology examination and have been detected with serum CA125 during and after chemotherapy. The patients age ranges from 19 to 83 years old, and the median age is 50 years old. The follow-up time is 12 144 months, and the median time is 76 months. Of the 342 subjects, 192 had serious cystadenocarcinoma;26,mucinous cystadenocarcinoma; 32, endometrial adenocarcinoma; 23, clear cell carcinoma; 66, mixed type cases; and 3, undifferentiated carcinoma. The criteria and guideline for surgical pathology staging were provided by the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) (Table 1). Seven cases involving young patients opted to retain their reproductive functions, whereas the rest underwent satisfactory cytoreductive surgery (residual tumor lesions 1 cm) and received platinum-based chemotherapy after. Each patient regularly underwent CA125 test, gynecological examination, abdominal ultrasound, chest radiograph, or CT/MRI/PET examinations before and after chemotherapy. Three thousand one hundred seventy-five cases of menopausal women without complications were selected, whereas 603 postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor, except epithelial ovarian tumor, were chosen as the control group. The menopausal women s age ranges from 50 to 88 years old, and the median age is 59 year old. The postoperative patients age ranges from 26 to 73 years old, and the median age is 50. The followup time is 12 144 months, and the median time is 76 months. The levels of CA125 for all patients before operation were all >35 U/ml and received regulated the platinum-based combination chemotherapy after operation, regular followup, and monthly monitoring of CA125, every 3 months accepted clinical and imaging examinations. Blood samples measuring 2 ml were used as separation serum. Automatic chemiluminescent immunoassay analyzer Siemens Centaur XP auxiliary reagent was used to detect the concentration of CA125, observing the dynamic changes in CA125 in gynecological and imaging examination. SPSS 13.0 software was used for statistical analysis. Count data were analyzed by χ2 test,withp <0.05 considered statistically significant. Results 1. Value distribution of serum CA125 in postmenopausal women The range of serum CA125 in 3175 cases of menopausal women is 2 29.1 U/ml, the median is 8.1 U/ml, Table 1 Pathological type distribution of epithelial ovarian carcinoma patients Category Pathology staging I II III IV Total Serous cystadenocarcinoma 15(7.8) 23(12.0) 145(75.5) 9(4.7) 192(56.1) Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma 9(34.6) 3(11.5) 14(53.9) 0(0) 26(7.6) Endometrial adenocarcinoma 11(34.4) 5(15.6) 16(50.0) 0(0) 32(9.4) Clear cell carcinoma 19(82.6) 0(0) 4(17.4) 0(0) 23(6.7) Mixed type and undifferentiated carcinoma 26(37.7) 24(34.8) 19(27.5) 0(0) 69(20.2) Total 80(23.4) 55(16.1) 198(57.9) 9(2.6) 342(100.0)

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Page 3 of 7 Table 2 Level of serum CA 125 in postmenopausal women and the patients of each group CA 125 level(u/ml) Menopausal women (N = 3175) Epithelial ovarian carcinoma patients Non-recurrent (N = 296) Recurrent (N = 46) (N = 603) Rang 2 ~ 29.1 2.0 ~ 34.9 10.2 ~ 82.8 4.1 ~ 20.8 Median 8.1 8.9 29.7 7.2 X ± S 8.0 ± 1.1 9.0 ± 1.9 31.3 ± 16.2 6.8 ± 2.1 Non-recurrent patients of gynecological malignant tumor and the mean ± standard deviation is 8.0 ± 1.1 U/ml (Table 2). The CA125 10 U/ml in the total proportion of postmenopausal women is 3134/3175 (98.7%). 2. Value distribution of serum CA125 in non-recurrent postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor There were 603 cases of non-recurrent postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor, except epithelial ovarian tumor patients who were ovariectomized. The follow-up time is 12 144 months, and the median time is 76 months. From this group, 33 had fallopian tube cancer; 167, endometrial cancer; and 403, cervical cancer (Table 3). The range of CA125 is 4.1 20.8 U/ml, the median is 7.2 U/ml, and the mean ± standard deviation is 6.8 ± 2.1 U/ml(Table 2). 3. Value distribution of serum CA125 in non-recurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma There were 296 cases of non-recurrent patients in the total proportion of epithelial ovarian carcinoma (86.5%). The follow-up time is 12 144 months, and the median time is 76 months. The dynamics of changes in CA125 levels is 2 34.9 U/ml, the median is 8.9 U/ml, and the mean ± standard deviation is 9.0 ± 1.9 U/ml(Table 2). Statistical analysis of the CA125 values of non-recurrent postoperative epithelial ovarian carcinoma patients and postmenopausal women and the non-recurrence of gynecological malignant tumor patients showed no significant difference (P >0.05). The postoperative CA125 values were divided into four groups: 10 U/ml, 10 20 U/ml, 20 35 U/ml, and 35 U/ ml. There were 275 cases of epithelial ovarian carcinoma non-recurrent patients whose CA125 10 U/ml (275/296, 92.9%) (Table 4). 4. Value distribution of serum CA125 in recurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma There were 46 cases of recurrent patients in the total proportion of epithelial ovarian carcinoma patients (13.5%). The follow-up time is 12 144 months, and the median time is 76 months. The dynamics of changes in CA125 levels is 10.2 82.8 U/ml, the median is 29.7 U/ml, and the mean ± standard deviation is 31.3 ± 16.2 U/ml (Table 2). The postoperative CA125 values were divided into four groups: 10 U/ ml, 10 20 U/ml, 20 35 U/ml, and 35 U/ml (Table 4), the CA125 35 U/ml in the total proportion of recurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma when found the recurrent lesions is 31/46 (67.4%).. When the value of CA125 is higher than 10 U/ml and continuously increased, general the time from starting elevation of CA125 to recurrences were 2 to 3 months,need to be vigilant and should be combined with imaging examination (PET-CT). Three cases of recurrent patients was found the recurrent lesions by PET examination when the value of CA125 is 14.5 U/ ml, 13.5 U/ml, and 20.9 U/ml, and the recurrent lesions was found in the spleen (Fig. 1), in the liver (Fig. 2), and in the pelvic (Fig. 3), respectively, after the second surgery, up to now, the values of CA125 are all less than 10 U/ml and the patients were all alive so far. Discussion Serum CA125 is mainly found in mesothelial cells and Miller tubular epithelial tissues, including peritoneal, pleural, pericardial, fallopian tube, endometrial, Table 3 Value distribution of serum CA 125 in ovariectomized, non-recurrent, postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor Type Pathology staging Total CA 125 level(u/ml) I II III IV Range Median X ± S Fallopian tube cancer 3 7 17 6 33(5.5) 4.1 ~ 12.0 7.4 8.1 ± 2.4 Endometrial cancer 55 88 21 3 167(27.7) 3.1 ~ 15.1 7.0 7.3 ± 2.8 Cervical cancer 152 200 34 17 403(66.8) 3.5 ~ 20.8 6.6 6.7 ± 2.2 Total 210 295 72 26 603(100) 4.1 ~ 20.8 7.2 6.8 ± 2.1

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Page 4 of 7 Table 4 Value distribution of serum CA 125 in postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma CA 125 Non-recurrent Recurrent; value(u/ml) N (%) Range Median X ± S N (%) Range Median X ± S 10 275(92.9) 2 ~ 10 6.9 6.2 ± 1.8 (0)0 _ 20 ~ 10 15(5.1) 10.3 ~ 16.4 14.1 12.9 ± 2.1 16(34.8) 10.2 ~ 18.9 15.3 14.2 ± 2.5 35 ~ 20 6(2.0) 25 ~ 34.9 27.1 26.7 ± 3.1 15(32.6) 21.1 ~ 34.8 24.4 24.2 ± 3.4 35< (0)0 _ 15(32.6) 35.1 ~ 82.8 46.8 49.6 ± 11.9 and cervical tissues. It acts as an antigen not only for ovarian carcinoma but also for inflammatory response disease that comes from mesothelial cells and Miller tubular epithelial tissues [4]. Postmenopausal women and non-recurrent postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor almost do not contract CA125 - related diseases, such as pelvic inflammatory disease, endometriosis, peritonitis, etc. Therefore, without any complication cases, the range of CA125 is consistent with that of nonrecurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma. James reported 11 epithelial ovarian cancer patients whose histological or radiological examination revealed recurrence, their serum CA125 continuously increased three times within the normal range from one to 3 months [5]. In the present study, the median values of CA125 for non-recurrent patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma, menopausal women and postoperative patients of gynecological malignant tumor are all less than 10 U/ml. The CA125 10 U/ml in the total proportion of postmenopausal women is 3134/3175 (98.7%), The CA125 10 U/ml in epithelial ovarian carcinoma non-recurrent patients is 275/296 (92.9%), statistical analysis of the CA125 values of non-recurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma and postmenopausal women and non-recurrent patients of gynecological malignant tumor showed no significant difference (P >0.05). The CA125 in 31 cases of recurrent patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma whose CA125 35 U/ml continuously increased within the normal range before recurrence, consistent with the report. Among recurrent patients, before recurrent the value of CA125 were all less than 10 U/ml and when the CA125 were continuously increased and combined with imaging examination (PET-CT), three cases of recurrent patients was found the recurrent lesions by PET examination when the value of CA125 is 14.5 U/ml, 13.5 Fig. 1 The recurrent lesions was found in the spleen by PET examination when the value of CA125 is 14.5 U/ml

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Fig. 2 The recurrent lesions was found in the liver by PET examination when the value of CA125 is 13.5 U/ml Fig. 3 The recurrent lesions was found in the pelvic by PET examination when the value of CA125 is 20.9 U/ml Page 5 of 7

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Page 6 of 7 U/ml, and 20.9 U/ml, respectively, we found the recurrent lesions early and the patients had the opportunity for surgery, after the second surgery, up to now, the values of CA125 are all less than 10 U/ml and the patients were all alive so far. Low reported that in 76 cases of postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian carcinoma followed up in 1 year, 68 revealed recurrence by MRI, 24 (35.3%) of which have a CA125 35 U/ml [6]. Garcia-Velloso reported that 55 cases of postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma revealed recurrence by PET, 11 of which have CA125 35 U/ml (11/55, 20.0%) [7]. Crawford reported 106 cases of postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma. The median survival time of patients whose CA125 10 U/ml is 2968 days, those whose CA125 is between 11 and 20 U/ml is 537 days, and those whose CA125 is between 21 and 30 U/ml is 537 days. They correspondingly proposed that when patients have CA125 10U/ml, the recurrence rate is low and prognosis is good [8]. Bese reported 45 cases of postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma, of which 28 who had CA125 20 U/ml based on gynecological examination and imaging examination did not show recurrence, but the second exploratory surgery found recurrence [9]. Sugiyama reported 62 cases of postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma using 20 U/ml as the cut-off value to monitor recurrence and for early detection of recurrent lesions [10]. In comparison, this study examined 46 cases of recurrent postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma, 31 of which have CA125 35 U/ml (31/46, 67.4%). According to our study, the detection value of CA125 in patients with ovarian epithelial cancer after surgery is necessary, it can be found the recurrent lesions timely, timely treatment, so as not to delay the treatment time. This is different from some scholars point of view, some scholars believe that serum CA125 has no clinical value for the follow-up monitoring the recurrence for postoperative patients with epithelial ovarian cancer [3], they established the benefits of early treatment on the basis of increased CA125 concentrations compared with delayed treatment on the basis of clinical recurrence, the result showed no evidence of a survival benefit with early treatment of relapse on the basis of a raised CA125 concentration alone. In their treatment, the patients were only treated by chemotherapy, but not surgery. It is known that ovarian cancer is mainly treated by surgery, our clinical follow-up found that when the serum CA125 value is <35 U/ml, some postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma who underwent cytoreductive or radical surgery and chemotherapy show recurrent lesions in gynecological and imaging examinations or in laparotomy exploration and biopsy, early detected the lesions, the patients had the opportunity for surgery, the prognosis were improvement and the survival time were prolonged. Some scholars believe that women at familial/genetic ovarian cancer risk often undergo screening despite unproven efficacy. each woman has her own CA125 baseline, serum CA125 q3 months, evaluated using a risk of ovarian cancer algorithm (ROCA), detected significant increases above each subject s baseline, which triggered transvaginal ultrasound, ROCA q3 months had better early-stage sensitivity at high specificity compared with CA125 > 35 U/mL q6/q12 months [11], in our study, the recurrence rate of epithelial ovarian carcinoma in postoperative patients is high, and most cases of recurrence involve large lesions, the time of treatment is also delayed. Patients are not sensitive to chemotherapy drugs, the treatment is ineffective, and the prognosis is poor. If the value of the CA125 for postoperative patients of epithelial ovarian carcinoma between 10 and 35 U/ml indicates a relative risk of recurrence. When the value of CA125 is higher than 10 U/ml and continuously increased, need to be vigilant and should be combined with imaging examination (PET-CT).early detected the lesions, the patients had the opportunity for surgery. Conclusions When the value of CA125 is higher than 10 U/ml and continuously increased, need to be vigilant and should be combined with imaging examination (PET-CT), early detection of recurrent lesions and early retreatment, especially maybe have the opportunity for surgery, this result may improve the prognosis for recurrent patients. Acknowledgements Not applicable. Funding There is no funding. Availability of data and materials Data sharing not applicable to this article as no datasets were generated or analysed during the current study. Authors contributions NG performed the statistical analysis and drafted the manuscript. ZP participated in the design of the study. Both authors read and approved the final manuscript. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests Consent for publication The article has no data details about the person must to consent. Ethics approval and consent to participate Not applicable Publisher s Note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Guo and Peng Journal of Ovarian Research (2017) 10:14 Page 7 of 7 Received: 4 January 2017 Accepted: 2 March 2017 References 1. Bast RC, Klug TL, John E, et al. A radioimmunoassay using a monoclonal antibody to monitor the course of epithelial ovarian cancer. N Engl J Med. 1983;309:887 90. 2. Gynecologic Oncology Branch of the Chinese Medical Association. The standard diagnosis and treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer (recommended). Chin J Obstet Gynecol. 2003;38:717 9. 3. Rustin GJ, van der Burg ME, Griffin CL, et al. Early versus delayed treatment of relapsed ovarian cancer (MRC OV05/EORTC 55955): a randomised trial. Lancet. 2010;376:1155 63. 4. Zeng J, Yin J, Song X, et al. Reduction of CA125 Levels During Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Can Predict Cytoreduction to No Visible Residual Disease in Patients with Advanced Epithelial Ovarian Cancer, Primary Carcinoma of Fallopian tube and Peritoneal Carcinoma. J Cancer. 2016;7:2327 32. 5. James L, Edward P, John M, et al. Clinical implications of a rising serum CA- 125 within the normal range in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer: a preliminary investigation. Gynecol Oncol. 2013;89:233 8. 6. Low RN, Duggan B, Barone RM, et al. Treated ovarian cancer: MR imaging, laparotomy reassessment, and serum CA-125 values compared with clinical outcome at 1 year. Radiology. 2005;235:918 44. 7. Garcia-Velloso MJ, Jurado M, Ceamanos C, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of FDG PET in the follow-up of platinum-sensitive epithelial ovarian carcinoma. Eur J Nucl Med Mol I. 2007;34:1396 405. 8. Crawford SM, Peace J. Does the nadir CA125 concentration predict a longterm outcome after chemotherapy for carcinoma of the ovary? Ann Oncol. 2005;16:47 50. 9. Bese T, Demirkiran F, Arvas M, et al. What should be the cut-off level of serum CA125 to evaluate the disease status before second-look laparotomy in epithelial ovarian carcinoma? Int J Gynecol Cancer. 1997;7:42 5. 10. Sugiyama T, Nishida T, Komai K. Comparison of CA 125 assays with abdominopelvic computed tomography and transvaginal ultrasound in monitoring of ovarian cancer. BJOG-Int J Obstet GY. 1996;54:251 7. 11. Skates SJ, Greene MH, Buys SS, et al. Early Detection of Ovarian Cancer using the Risk of Ovarian Cancer Algorithm with Frequent CA125 Testing in Women at Increased Familial Risk - Combined Results from Two Screening Trials. Clin Cancer Res. 2017. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-2750. Submit your next manuscript to BioMed Central and we will help you at every step: We accept pre-submission inquiries Our selector tool helps you to find the most relevant journal We provide round the clock customer support Convenient online submission Thorough peer review Inclusion in PubMed and all major indexing services Maximum visibility for your research Submit your manuscript at www.biomedcentral.com/submit