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. 1993 Sep;36(9):810-5.
doi: 10.1007/BF02047376.

Role of carcinoembryonic antigen in predicting resectability of recurrent colorectal cancer

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Role of carcinoembryonic antigen in predicting resectability of recurrent colorectal cancer

S Schneebaum et al. Dis Colon Rectum. 1993 Sep.

Abstract

The reported low resectability rate for patients with recurrent colorectal cancer who have carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels > 11 has led us to perform this study. One hundred twenty-four patients who underwent Radioimmunoguided Surgery (RIGS) procedures for recurrent colorectal cancer from 1986 to the present were studied. In surgery, all patients underwent a traditional exploration followed by survey with a hand-held, gamma-detecting probe to detect preinjected radiolabeled monoclonal antibodies attached to cancer cells. Sites of metastases included: 72 liver (58.1 percent), 23 pelvis (18.5 percent), 15 distant lymph nodes (12.1 percent), 2 anastomotic (1.6 percent), and 12 other sites (9.7 percent). The resectability rate was 43.5 percent (54 patients). The mean preoperative CEA level for patients with resectable disease was significantly lower than for patients with unresectable disease (P = 0.017): unresectable--mean, 87.1; SD, 141.0; minimum, 0.3; maximum, 501; resectable--mean, 36.6; SD, 59.3; minimum, 0.3; maximum, 329. The CEA level for patients with liver metastasis did not vary significantly from those patients without metastasis: 70 vs. 58.2 (P = 0.58). Those patients with resectable liver tumors had lower mean CEA levels than those with unresectable liver, approaching significance: 41.6 vs. 91.9 (P = 0.065). Other metastatic sites had a mean CEA level of: pelvic, 72.6; distant lymph nodes, 47.8; anastomotic, 2.7; and other sites, 53.8. These data suggest that there is a significant difference between the preoperative CEA level of the resectable and unresectable recurrent colorectal cancer patients, but the large standard deviation does not justify abandonment of exploration for any CEA level.

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