Predictors of pretreatment CA125 at ovarian cancer diagnosis: a pooled analysis in the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium

Adult Ovarian Neoplasms/blood Epidemiology Oncology and Carcinogenesis Medizin CA125 03 medical and health sciences Rare Diseases 0302 clinical medicine Clinical Research Ovarian cancer Pregnancy Health Services and Systems Health Sciences Breast Cancer Biomarkers, Tumor 2.1 Biological and endogenous factors Humans Aetiology CA-125 Antigen/blood Cancer Aged Ovarian Neoplasms Tumor Biomedical and Clinical Sciences Predictors Local/blood Prevention Oncology and carcinogenesis Biomarker Middle Aged Prognosis Ovarian Cancer 3. Good health Parity Neoplasm Recurrence Local CA-125 Antigen Public Health and Health Services Tumor/blood Female Neoplasm Recurrence, Local Biomarkers
DOI: 10.1007/s10552-016-0841-3 Publication Date: 2017-01-03T04:33:53Z
ABSTRACT
Cancer antigen 125 (CA125) is a glycoprotein expressed by epithelial cells of several normal tissue types and overexpressed by several epithelial cancers. Serum CA125 levels are mostly used as an aid in the diagnosis of ovarian cancer patients, to monitor response to treatment and detect cancer recurrence. Besides tumor characteristics, CA125 levels are also influenced by several epidemiologic factors, such as age, parity, and oral contraceptive use. Identifying factors that influence CA125 levels in ovarian cancer patients could aid in the interpretation of CA125 values for individuals.We evaluated predictors of pretreatment CA125 in 13 studies participating in the Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium. This analysis included a total of 5,091 women with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer with pretreatment CA125 measurements. We used probit scores to account for variability in CA125 between studies and linear regression to estimate the association between epidemiologic factors and tumor characteristics and pretreatment CA125 levels.In age-adjusted models, older age, history of pregnancy, history of tubal ligation, family history of breast cancer, and family history of ovarian cancer were associated with higher CA125 levels while endometriosis was associated with lower CA125 levels. After adjusting for tumor-related characteristics (stage, histology, grade), body mass index (BMI) higher than 30 kg/m2 was associated with 10% (95% CI 2, 19%) higher CA125 levels, while race (non-white vs. white) was associated with 15% (95% CI 4, 27%) higher CA125 levels.Our results suggest that high BMI and race may influence CA125 levels independent of tumor characteristics. Validation is needed in studies that use a single assay for CA125 measurement and have a diverse study population.
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