Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3947131 | Gynecologic Oncology | 2011 | 5 Pages |
ObjectiveAbout 70% of epithelial ovarian cancer patients (EOC) are diagnosed at advanced stage with a five-year survival rate of only 30%. Whilst CA125 detects peritoneally-spread disease, it has limited sensitivity for early cancers, many of which are potentially curable.MethodsWe compared the new commercially available tumor marker HE4 with CA125 individually, in combination, within the risk of malignancy index (RMI) and the newly defined risk of malignancy algorithm (ROMA). Our prospectively-collected cohort of 160 patients consisted of healthy controls, benign diseases, and borderline tumors/adenocarcinomas of ovarian, tubal, peritoneal and endometrial origin. HE4 and CA125 were measured in serum using standardized ELISA.ResultsBoth markers showed similar diagnostic performance in the detection of EOC at clinically defined thresholds (CA125 35 U/ml; HE4 70 pM) but HE4 was not elevated in endometriosis. Comparison of non-malignant diagnoses (n = 71) versus early stage ovarian and tubal cancers (n = 19) revealed that HE4 and ROMA displayed the best diagnostic performance (AUC 0.86/0.87, specificity 85.9%/87.3% and sensitivity 78.9%/78.9%, respectively). Whilst RMICA125 detects peritoneal cancer better than all other models (AUC 0.99, specificity 97.2%, sensitivity 80.0%), there is no other detection benefit from RMI compared to HE4 alone or included in ROMA.ConclusionsThe major advantage of HE4 lies in its specificity and improved detection of borderline tumors and early stage ovarian and tubal cancers. HE4 is superior to CA125 with or without RMI and ROMA indices. However, we see no benefit from combining both markers in clinical practice.
Research Highlights► HE4 has a higher sensitivity and specificity in detecting ovarian borderline tumors and early FIGO stage epithelial ovarian and tubal cancers. ► HE4 by itself is equivalent to ROMA ► There is no benefit of measuring both HE4 and CA125 in a clinical setting except in a premenopausal patient with high CA125 and complex pelvic mass, where HE4 could help to detect endometriosis.