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Lead-Time Trajectory of CA19-9 as an Anchor Marker for Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection

Authors :
Kim Anh Do
Andrea J. Bullock
Nikul Patel
Maureen Loftus
Jennifer B. Dennison
Xiangying Mao
Michael D. Kluger
Ana Babic
John A. Chabot
Kimmie Ng
Anirban Maitra
Ehsan Irajizad
Samir M. Hanash
Thomas E. Clancy
Johannes F. Fahrmann
James P. Long
Linda S. Lee
Michele T. Yip-Schneider
Jianjun Zhang
Jody Vykoukal
C. Max Schmidt
Fay Kastrinos
Jeanine M. Genkinger
Jinming Zhang
Brian M. Wolpin
Kunal Jajoo
Lauren K. Brais
Source :
Gastroenterology. 160(4)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background & Aims There is substantial interest in liquid biopsy approaches for cancer early detection among subjects at risk, using multi-marker panels. CA19-9 is an established circulating biomarker for pancreatic cancer; however, its relevance for pancreatic cancer early detection or for monitoring subjects at risk has not been established. Methods CA19-9 levels were assessed in blinded sera from 175 subjects collected up to 5 years before diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and from 875 matched controls from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening Trial. For comparison of performance, CA19-9 was assayed in blinded independent sets of samples collected at diagnosis from 129 subjects with resectable pancreatic cancer and 275 controls (100 healthy subjects; 50 with chronic pancreatitis; and 125 with noncancerous pancreatic cysts). The complementary value of 2 additional protein markers, TIMP1 and LRG1, was determined. Results In the PLCO cohort, levels of CA19-9 increased exponentially starting at 2 years before diagnosis with sensitivities reaching 60% at 99% specificity within 0 to 6 months before diagnosis for all cases and 50% at 99% specificity for cases diagnosed with early-stage disease. Performance was comparable for distinguishing newly diagnosed cases with resectable pancreatic cancer from healthy controls (64% sensitivity at 99% specificity). Comparison of resectable pancreatic cancer cases to subjects with chronic pancreatitis yielded 46% sensitivity at 99% specificity and for subjects with noncancerous cysts, 30% sensitivity at 99% specificity. For prediagnostic cases below cutoff value for CA19-9, the combination with LRG1 and TIMP1 yielded an increment of 13.2% in sensitivity at 99% specificity (P = .031) in identifying cases diagnosed within 1 year of blood collection. Conclusion CA19-9 can serve as an anchor marker for pancreatic cancer early detection applications.

Details

ISSN :
15280012
Volume :
160
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8ebc0ca43a6372073d51240cf981cf36