1. Serum and tissue selenium levels in gastric cancer patients and correlation with CEA.
- Author
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Charalabopoulos K, Kotsalos A, Batistatou A, Charalabopoulos A, Peschos D, Vezyraki P, Kalfakakou V, Metsios A, Charalampopoulos A, Macheras A, Agnantis N, and Evangelou A
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma secondary, Case-Control Studies, Female, Fluorometry, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Immunoradiometric Assay, Intestinal Neoplasms pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Prognosis, Stomach Neoplasms pathology, Adenocarcinoma metabolism, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Carcinoembryonic Antigen blood, Intestinal Neoplasms metabolism, Selenium metabolism, Stomach Neoplasms metabolism
- Abstract
Background: An inverse relationship between selenium (Se) intake and cancer mortality is evident in humans., Materials and Methods: In eighty patients who had been operated on for primary gastric cancer, serum Se and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels were measured preoperatively using a fluorometric and immunoradiometric assay (IRMA), respectively., Results: The serum Se levels were 43+/-6.3 microg l(-1) in the patient group and 68.7+/-4.5 microg l(-1) in healthy individuals (p<0.001). The serum CEA was 12+/-1.9 U ml(-1) in the gastric cancer patients and 2.1 U ml(-1) in the control group (p<0.001). The Se tissue concentrations were 2,640+/-220 mg g(-1) in excised neoplastic tissue and 685+/-115 mg g(-1) in non-neoplastic tissue (p<0.001). An inverse correlation between Se and CEA serum levels was found (r=-0.782). There was no correlation between serum/tissue Se concentration and disease stage/histological type or gender in the patient group.
- Published
- 2009