Buamah P K, Skillen A W
Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Thanet General Hospital, Margate, UK.
J Surg Oncol. 1994 Jun;56(2):71-4. doi: 10.1002/jso.2930560204.
Serum CA 125 concentrations have been measured in 115 patients with histologically confirmed nonmalignant pelvic disease, that is, serous cystadenoma (n = 56), mucinous cystadenoma (n = 14), fibroma (n = 33), thecoma (n = 8), and Brenner tumour (n = 4). Increased CA 125 concentrations (> 35 KU/L) were found in 14 patients, with a range of 46-891 KU/L, a mean of 205 KU/L, and a median of 97 KU/L. The highest values were found in patients with ascites. Serial measurements in one patient showed a fall in the 2 days immediately after surgery, over the next 3 days showing a two- to three-fold increase, followed by a slow return to normal over the next 7 weeks. Elevated CA 125 levels may not indicate ovarian malignancy and do not differentiate between benign and malignant pelvic masses.