• 1 January 1981
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 26 (2), 73-79
Abstract
To evaluate the significance of plasma levels of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in patients with ovarian cancer, a chart review of such patients was undertaken, along with a literature survey in order to consolidate the data for analysis. CEA levels are consistently lower in ovarian cancer than in colorectal cancer and the assay is not of value in the primary diagnosis of ovarian cancer. It may be of prognostic significance in that advanced disease and undifferentiated tumors which carry the worst prognoses demonstrate elevated CEA levels with higher frequency. CEA levels may be of value in assessing the response to therapy and in detecting recurrent disease. Patients who demonstrated good clinical responses to therapy showed a drop to low plasma CEA levels while patients with poor responses showed no decrease or a rise in CEA levels. CEA rose again after a postoperative drop in patients with recurrent disease before they demonstrated clinical evidence of recurrence. The relationship of plasma levels to tissue levels of CEA and to histologic type of ovarian carcinoma remains unclear.