| Literature DB >> 31937069 |
Claire Hall1, Louise Clarke1, Atanu Pal1,2, Pamela Buchwald1, Tim Eglinton1, Chris Wakeman1, Frank Frizelle1.
Abstract
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is not normally produced in significant quantities after birth but is elevated in colorectal cancer. The aim of this review was to define the current role of CEA and how best to investigate patients with elevated CEA levels. A systematic review of CEA was performed, in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Studies were identified from PubMed, Cochrane library, and controlled trials registers. We identified 2,712 papers of which 34 were relevant. Analysis of these papers found higher preoperative CEA levels were associated with advanced or metastatic disease and thus poorer prognosis. Postoperatively, failure of CEA to return to normal was found to be indicative of residual or recurrent disease. However, measurement of CEA levels alone was not sufficient to improve survival rates. Two algorithms are proposed to guide investigation of patients with elevated CEA: one for patients with elevated CEA after CRC resection, and another for patients with de novo elevated CEA. CEA measurement has an important role in the investigation, management and follow-up of patients with colorectal cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Carcinoembryonic antigen; Colorectal cancer; Recurrence
Year: 2019 PMID: 31937069 PMCID: PMC6968721 DOI: 10.3393/ac.2019.11.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Coloproctol ISSN: 2287-9714
Fig. 1.Identification, screening, and selection of papers for inclusion. CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen.
CEA and prognosis: selected studies
| Author | Year | Origin | Study type | Study summary | Endpoint | No. of patients | Age (yr)[ | Sex ratio (%male) | Outcome summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stelzner [ | 2005 | Germany | Cohort (retrospective database) | Database review for predictors of survival in colorectal cancer | Overall survival in stage IV colorectal cancer | 186 | 68.6 (range, 30–92) | 54.3 | Preop CEA ≥ 5 ng/mL associated with decreased overall survival in stage IV disease. |
| Katoh [ | 2008 | Japan | Cohort (retrospective database) | Review of preop CEA levels in Dukes C patients | Survival | Retrospective: 237; prospective: 197 | 54.4% ≥ 60 in retrospective; 63.5% ≥ 60 in prospective | Retrospective: 59.1; prospective: 57.4 | CEA ≤ 2.5 ng/mL was a predictor of disease-free survival in Dukes C in earlier cohort. Association lost in later cohort, possibly due to improved chemotherapy. |
| Kim [ | 2009 | Korea | Cohort (retrospective data base) | Postoperative analysis of CEA preop and day 7 and 30-day post op | Survival | 122 | 57.56 ± 12.24 | 62.3 | Significant decrease in survival if CEA levels remain elevated in postop period. |
| Sun [ | 2009 | Taiwan | Cohort (retrospective data base) | Retrospective review of potential prognostic markers | Disease-free and overall survival | 1,367 | 66 (IQR, 19-25) | 55.4 | Preop CEA ≥ 5 ng/mL 2.38x more likely to die of cancer than those with CEA ≤5 ng/mL (P ≤ 0.001) |
| Thirunavukarasu [ | 2015 | USA | Cohort (retrospective SEER database) | Review of preop CEA levels | 5-Year overall and disease-specific mortality | 16,619 | 67.4 ± 13.8 | 49.7 | Elevated CEA was associated with worse overall and disease-specific mortality |
| Becerra [ | 2016 | USA | Cohort (retrospective data base) | Review of preop CEA levels in Stage I-III CRC | Overall survival | 69,512 | Normal CEA: 69.1 ± 13.0; elevated CEA: 70.3 ± 12.9 | Normal CEA: 49.0; elevated CEA: 43.7 | Preop CEA level is associated with overall survival |
| Ozawa [ | 2017 | Japan | Cohort (retrospective National Cancer Database) | Review of preop CEA levels | 5-Year disease-free survival | 7,296 | 65.3 ± 11.2 | 54.4 | Preop CEA level is independently associated with 5-year disease-free survival |
| Spindler [ | 2017 | USA | Cohort (retrospective National Cancer Database) | Review of preop CEA levels in Stage II CRC | 5-Year overall survival | 74,945 | Normal CEA: 70 (IQR, 59-79); elevated CEA 72 (IQR, 6081) | Normal CEA: 49.3 Elevated CEA: 43.4 | Preop elevated CEA is associated with reduced 5-year overall survival |
| Kim [ | 2017 | Korea | Retrospective and prospective cohort | To determine cutoff values for preop CEA in Stage III CRC | 5-Year overall and disease-free survival | Retrospective cohort: 965; prospective cohort: 268 | Retrospective: 60 (range, 14-84); prospective: 60 (range, 27-80) | Retrospective: 53.9 Prospective: 48.9 | A cutoff value of 3 ng/mL is optimal. Preoperative CEA above this level is associated with inferior overall and disease-free survival. |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; IQR, interquartile range; preop, preoperative; postop, postoperative; CRC, colorectal cancer.
Age: meanstandard deviation, mean ± standard deviation, or median (range), or median (IQR).
CEA and follow-up after CRC resection: selected studies
| Author | Year | Origin | Study type | Study summary | Endpoint | No. of patients | Age (yr), median (range) | Sex ratio (%male) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treasure [ | 1984 (published in full 2014) | UK | RCT | 티evated CEA prompted randomization to either continued monitoring (conventional arm) or laparotomy (aggressive) | Survival | 216 | Conventional: 62 (35-75); aggressive: 64 (33-75) | Conventional: 63; aggressive: 56 |
| Makela [ | 1995 | Finland | RCT | Intensive vs. conventional follow-up | Recurrence | 106 | Conventional: 69 (33-85); intensive: 63 (33-81) | Conventional: 50; intensive: 48 |
| Ohlsson [ | 1995 | Sweden | RCT | No follow-up vs. intensive follow-up | Recurrence | 107 | - | 47.7 |
| Pietra [ | 1998 | Italy | RCT | Conventional or intense follow-up | Recurrence | 207 | - | - |
| Primrose [ | 2014 | UK | RCT | Intensive vs. minimal follow-up 3 different intensive groups | Detection and curative treatment of recurrence | 1,202 | CT: 69 (62-76); CEA: 69 (6375); CT & CEA: 70 (64-76); minimal: 70 (63-75) | CT: 61.2; CEA: 61.3; CT & CEA: 61.3; minimal: 61.3 |
| Verberne [ | 2015 | Netherlands | RCT (stepped wedge) | Standard vs. intensive follow-up | CRC recurrence | 3,223 | 70 (26-95) | 56 |
| Wille-Jørgensen [ | On-going trial | Europe | Multicenter randomized controlled trial | Intensive vs. nonintensive follow-up | CRC recurrence and mortality | - | - | - |
| Lepage [ | On-going trial | France | Multicenter randomized controlled trial | Standard vs. intensive follow-up | 5-year overall survival | - | - | - |
RCT, randomized control trial; CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; CRC, colorectal cancer; CT, computed tomography.
CEA and follow-up after CRC: outcome measures in selected studies
| Trial | Type of regimen | Time to first recurrence (mo) | Proportion of recurrences | Overall 5-year survival | Outcome summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treasure (CEASL) [ | All patients had clinical review 3/12 for 2 years and 6/12 for the next 3 years. CEA was measured monthly for the first 3 years and 3/12 for the next 2 years. | Median time from primary surgery to CEA increases and randomization was 403 days (range, 103–1,754) | Conventional: 82%; aggressive: 77% | Not reported. End of trial figures below | Second look laparotomy in the event of CEA elevation did not improve survival. |
| Patients were randomized if the CEA became elevated (≥10 ng/mL). | Conventional: 82% died | ||||
| 216 Patients were randomized. | Aggressive: 84% died | ||||
| Conventional: Continued clinical monitoring with clinicians blinded to increased CEA. | |||||
| Aggressive: Clinician screen for widespread metastatic disease examinations and CXR. If not found, patient had a laparotomy to look for recurrence. | |||||
| Makela [ | Clinic review for all 3/12 for 2 years, the 6/12 for 3 years with history, examination, complete blood cell counts, faecal occult bloods, CEA and CXR. | Conventional: 15 ± 10; intensive: 10 ± 5 | Conventional: 39%; intensive: 42% | Conventional: 54%; intensive: 59% | Intensive follow-up leads to earlier detection of recurrence. |
| USS liver every 6/12 and CT every year. | Most common sign indicating recurrence was CEA elevation in both groups. | ||||
| In addition: Conventional: rigid sigmoidoscopy at each visit for those who had undergone surgery for rectal and sigmoid cancers, and a barium enema was done for all patients at 12 months and once a year thereafter; Intensive: colonoscopy 3 months after the surgery to ensure a clean colon and once a year thereafter on allpatients | |||||
| Ohlsson [ | None/Control: No FU | - | Control: 33%; intensive: 32% | Control: 67%; intensive: 75% | Intensive follow-up did not improve survival. |
| Intensive: clinical exam, rigid sig, colonoscopy, CT pelvis (in patients with APR), pulmonary X-ray, liver function tests, CEA and faecal hemoglobin at 3-, 6-, 9-, 12-, 15-, 18-, 21-, 24-, 30-, 36-, 42-, 48-, and 60-month intervals | |||||
| Pietra [ | Conventional: clinical exam + CEA and USS at 6/12 intervals for 1 year then annually thereafter. | Conventional: 20.2 ± 6.1; iIntensive: 10.3 ± 2.7 | Conventional:19.4%; intensive: 25.2% | Conventional: 58.3%; intensive: 73.1% | Intense follow-up leads to earlier detection of recurrent disease and improved survival. |
| All patients received yearly CXR, colonoscopy and CT. | |||||
| Intensive: As above, but with intervals 3/12 for 2 years then 6/12 for 3 years | |||||
| Primrose (FACS) [ | Control: CT at 12–18 months or if symptomatic | - | Cancer recurrence in 16.6% of patients, 5.9% of these surgically treated with curative intent | Intensive follow-up (any group) detected recurrence earlier and increased rate of curative surgical treatment. No advantage when using CT and CEA in combination. Could not demonstrate survival advantage. | |
| Intensive: CT: Scan of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis every 6 months for 2 years, then annually for 3. CEA: CEA every 3 months for 2 years, then every 6 months for 3 years, with a single CT scan at 12 to 18 months if requested at study entry by hospital clinician. CT and CEA: Both of the regimes combined. | |||||
| All had colonoscopy at 2 and 5 years | |||||
| Rosati (GILDA) [ | Control: Clinical review and CEA every 3 months for 2 years, then every 6 months for 3 years. Colonoscopy at 1 year. Liver USS at 4 months and 16 months. | Intensive surveillance had earlier detection of 5.9 months (95% CI, 2.71–9.11) | Overall recurrence rate: 20.4%; control: 18.7%; intensive: 22% | Control: 52.7%; intensive: 47.8% | Intensive surveillance detected recurrences earlier, but there was no difference in overall survival. Quality of life was not affected by surveillance strategy. |
| Intensive: Clinical review and CEA as per control group. CBC and CA 19-9 included with CEA. Colonoscopy and CXR every 12 months. Liver USS every 4 months for 16 months, then yearly | |||||
| Verberne (CEAWatch) [ | Control: 5-year follow-up. Clinic every 6/12 for 3 years, then annually thereafter. Liver USS and CXR at each visit. CEA every 3 to 6 months for 3 years and annually thereafter. | Specific time interval not given; however, the authors stated that the time to diagnosis of recurrent disease decreased with the intensive follow-up protocol as compared to the control protocol (HR, 1.45; 95% CI, 1.08–1.95; P = 0.013) | Overall recurrence rate: 7.5%; control: 3.6%; intensive: 4.4% | No difference in OS or DFS between 2 arms. Survival significantly worse when detected by patients self-report rather than CEA or imaging. | An intensified protocol with CEA monitoring and assessment of CEA rise rather than absolute value detected recurrences earlier than the standard protocol. This does not affect overall or disease-free survival. |
| Intensive: bimonthly CEA and yearly imaging for 3 years. CEA every 3/12 for next 2 years. Annual clinic review with imaging of chest and abdomen for 3 years. If 20% increase in CEA, another blood sample was drawn 4 weeks later. If a consecutive rise, CT scan of chest and abdomen was advised. Normal value was considered to be ≤2.5 ng/mL | |||||
| Wille-Jørgensen (COLOFOL) [ | Nonintensive: CT scan of liver and lungs (or CT of liver + plain X-ray of lungs) + CEA after 12 and 36 months. | - | - | - | Recruitment ended 2015. Results awaited. |
| Intensive: CT scan of liver and lungs (or CT of liver + plain X-ray of lungs) + CEA after 6, 12, 18, 24, and 36 months | |||||
| Lepage (PRODIGE 13) [ | Standard: Abdo USS every 3/12 for 3 years, 6/12 for 2 years, then annually. CXR ever 6/12 for 3 years, then annually. | - | - | - | Recruitment ended. Results awaited |
| Intensive: A CT thorax/abdominal/pelvis alternating with abdominal USS every 3/12 for 3 years, then every 6/12 for 2 years. CEA every 3/12 for 3 years, then 6/12 2 years |
FACS, Follow-up After Colorectal Surgery; GILDA, Gruppo Italiano di Lavoro per la Diagnosi Anticipata; CEAWatch, Carcino-Embryonic Antigen Watch; CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; CRC, colorectal cancer; CT, computed tomography; FU, follow-up; CXR, chest X-Ray; USS, UltraSound Scan; CBC, complete blood count; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; OS, overall survival; DFS, disease-free survival.
CEA and screening/diagnosis: selected studies
| Author | Year | Origin | Study type | Asymptomatic vs. symptomatic | Endpoint | No. of patients | Age (yr), median | Sex ratio (%male) | Outcome summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lee [ | 2011 | Korea | Case control | Asymptomatic | Detection of colorectal cancer | 546 | (A) 56 | A) 77 | 4.6% of high CEA group had CRC compared to 1.3% of normal CEA group. |
| (A) CEA ≥5 ng/mL | (B) 54 | B) 73.4 | CEA more likely to be elevated in advanced colorectal cancer. | ||||||
| (B) CEA ≤5 ng/mL | |||||||||
| Nielsen [ | 2011 | Denmark | Case control | Symptomatic | Detection of colorectal cancer | 4,509 | 61 | 45.9 | CEA more likely to be elevated in advanced colorectal cancer. Median of 8.1 ng/mL in stage 4 disease |
| Wild [ | 2010 | Germany | Case control | Mixed | Comparison of serum-biomarker panel with Faecal occult blood testing | 1,027 | (A) 67 | (A) 52.2 | CEA more likely to be elevated in advanced colorectal cancer. 88.2% sensitivity in stage 4 disease. |
| (A) CRC 301 | (B) 62 | (B) 39.1 | |||||||
| (B) GI disease control 104 | (C) 66 | (C) 58.7 | |||||||
| (C) Adenoma 143 | (D) 62 | (D) 46.1 | CEA, seprase, CYFRA 21-1, ferritin and anti-p53 biomarker combination was comparable with faecal immunochemical testing with 82.4% versus 81.8% at 95% specificity, | ||||||
| (D) Other disease 141 | (E) 64 | (E) 42.6 | |||||||
| (E) Other malignancy 176 | |||||||||
| Wen [ | 2015 | Taiwan | Case control | Mixed | Detection of cancer using panel of 8 markers | 41,516 | CEA sensitivity 53.8%. Increases, when used in combination as panel of 8 biomarkers, to 76.9% |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen; CRC, colorectal cancer; GI, gastrointestinal.
Conditions associated with elevated carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) level
| Nonmalignant | Malignant |
|---|---|
| Smoking | Tumors associated with high CEA expression |
| Infections | Colorectal[ |
| Peptic ulcer disease | Ovarian[ |
| Inflammatory bowel disease | Cervical[ |
| Pancreatitis | Lung |
| Hypothyroidism | Oesophageal |
| Liver cirrhosis, hepatitis | Gastric |
| Benign breast conditions | Small intestinal |
| Other benign tumors usually in organs where the cancers are associate with raised CEAd | Hepatobiliary |
| Pancreatic | |
| Breast | |
| Medullary | |
| Other CEA-expressing tumors | |
| Choriocarcinoma | |
| Osteosarcoma | |
| Retinoblastoma | |
| Hepatoma | |
| Melanoma | |
| Lymphoma | |
| Urinary bladder, prostate and renal cell carcinoma |
CEA, carcinoembryonic antigen.
CEA monitoring used clinically.
Fig. 2.Algorithm 1: Investigation pathway for a patient with a raised carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) with a previous history of a CEA-expressing cancer. aOrgan-specific investigations: tumor markers, CT scan, colonoscopy, gastroscopy, mammography, cystoscopy, Ultrasound Scan (US), bone scan, biopsy, other test as required. PET/CT, positron emission tomography-computed tomography.
Fig. 3.Algorithm 2: Investigation pathway for a patient with a de novo raised carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). aOrgan-specific investigations: tumor markers, CT scan, colonoscopy, gastroscopy, mammography, cystoscopy, US, bone scan, biopsy, other test as required. Clinical review includes: a full history and examination of the thyroid, breast, thorax, abdomen and pelvis, visual field testing, fundoscopy, long bones examination. Look for melanoma. In females, cervical examination. In males, a prostate examination. PET/CT, positron emission tomography-computed tomography.