Dittrich C, Jakesz R, Havelec L, Lenzhofer R, Breyer S, Moser K
Cancer Detect Prev. 1985;8(1-2):181-7.
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels of 161 patients with gastric cancer and of 12 patients with noncarcinomatous diseases of the stomach were retrospectively analyzed. In this study, we examined the correlation between CEA level and histologic type, T and N stage, and the value of the preoperative CEA determination for diagnosis, operability and prognosis for patients with gastric cancer. Summarizing our results: There exist significant higher CEA levels in patients with gastric cancer in comparison with patients with noncarcinomatous disease of the stomach (p less than 0.01), but the absolute CEA titer is not a reliable parameter for the prediction of the existence or absence of gastric cancer for the individual patient. A positive correlation between the CEA level and the histologic type in the subgroup of radically operable patients was found, the intestinal type having lower titers (p less than 0.05). The operability of two different histologic entities (diffuse or intestinal type) was equally high. No conclusion can be drawn from CEA plasma levels concerning the operability of the individual gastric cancer patient; on one hand, 30% of the patients with normal preoperative CEA titers could not be radically operated, whereas 34% of the patients with elevated preoperative CEA titers (greater than 5.0 ng/ml) had radical surgery. Furthermore, the absolute value of the preoperative CEA level does not predict the course of the disease, whereas continuously rising postoperative CEA levels are indicative of tumor progression.