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Case Reports
. 1985 May 1;55(9):1924-30.
doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19850501)55:9<1924::aid-cncr2820550916>3.0.co;2-h.

Isolated ectopic production of the free beta subunit of chorionic gonadotropin by an epidermoid carcinoma of unknown primary site

Case Reports

Isolated ectopic production of the free beta subunit of chorionic gonadotropin by an epidermoid carcinoma of unknown primary site

S B Nagelberg et al. Cancer. .

Abstract

Metastatic choriocarcinoma was suspected in a 39-year-old woman who presented 7 months postpartum with fatigue, pelvic pain, a massive pleural effusion, and a positive urine pregnancy test. Subsequent evaluation resulted in discovery of the isolated production of the free beta-subunit of chorionic gonadotropin (CG-beta) by a widespread, poorly differentiated epidermoid carcinoma. Chemotherapy was ineffective, the woman died, and at autopsy the primary site of the tumor could not be determined. The patient's serum (185 ng/ml) and a tumor metastasis (720 ng/g) contained large amounts of immunoactive material that diluted in parallel to CG-beta standard, but neither chorionic gonadotropin (CG), its alpha subunit, nor other placental proteins were detected. A monoclonal antibody that recognizes free CG-beta, but not intact CG, was instrumental in implicating an ectopic source of the CG-beta before a tissue diagnosis was obtained. When the patient's serum was chromatographed on a dextran gel, the CG-beta immunoactivity eluted in a position of higher apparent molecular weight than either standard CG or CG-beta, suggesting that this neoplasm secreted an altered molecular form of the CG-beta subunit.

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