| Literature DB >> 34208296 |
Ioannis Passos1, Elisavet Stefanidou2, Soultana Meditskou-Eythymiadou3, Maria Mironidou-Tzouveleki4, Vasiliki Manaki5, Vasiliki Magra5, Styliani Laskou5, Stylianos Mantalovas5, Stelian Pantea6, Isaak Kesisoglou5, Konstantinos Sapalidis5.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA); embryologic origin; medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC); monoclonal antibodies; preoperative
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34208296 PMCID: PMC8230872 DOI: 10.3390/medicina57060609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Papers included in the survey.
| Study Group | Year of Publication | Study Design | Patients Enrolled | Results (Correlation between CEA and MTC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ishikawa/Hamada | 1976 | Radioimmunoassay | 78 | CEA actively produced by MTC |
| Wells | 1978 | Plasma measurement | 72 | Elevated CEA levels in MTC patients |
| Mendelsohn | 1984 | Immunohistochemical | CEA correlates with tumor virulence in MTC | |
| Barbet | 2005 | Retrospective study/ cohort | 65 | Doubling time ofcalcitonin and CEA values could be used to estimate the prognosis of the disease |
| Machens/Dralle | 2007 | Retrospective/ multivariate analysis | 150 | Elevated CEA levels indicate advanced disease, larger primary tumor size, possible extra-thyroid expansion and distant metastases |
| Giraudet | 2008 | CEA and calcitonin doubling time values assess the disease progression and overall prognosis | ||
| Van Veelen | 2009 | Review | CEA can be associated preoperatively with tumor size, recurrence, disease prognosis and presence of lymph node metastases in MTC | |
| Correia—Deur | 2009 | Single-center retrospective study | 26 | Abnormally high CEA levels in all patients |
| Chen | 2010 | Guidelines | CEA values >30 ng/mL indicate extra-thyroid expansion/values >100 ng/mL are associated with extensive lymph node involvement and distant metastases | |
| Papapetrou | 2012 | Retrospective/follow up | 4 | MTC surgical cytoreduction induces an increase in serum calcitonin and CEA doubling times |
| Nien | 2013 | Retrospective study | 5 | CEA predictor of cure in MTC |
| Wakabayashi | 2014 | mRNA expression analysis/cell cultures | CEACAM4 is specifically expressed in MTC cells | |
| Wells | 2015 | Guidelines | CEA is not a specific biomarker for MTC/determination of serum CEA levels is useful in assessing MTC progression | |
| Mitchell | 2016 | Guidelines | Preoperative CEA routine monitoring for MTC | |
| Chen | 2017 | Case report | Persistently high CEA values postoperatively in apatient treated for colorectal cance/MTC wasdiagnosed | |
| Turkdogan | 2018 | Retrospective/multivariate analysis | 33 | CEA values >271 ng/mL significant for larger primary tumor size, CEA values >377 ng/mL positively correlated with more advanced stage of the disease, with lymph nodemetastases in the lateral cervical compartments/CEA values >500 ng/mL had a strong correlation with MTC mortality of up to 67%. |
| Fan | 2018 | Retrospective | 65 | CEA values ≥30 ng/mL statistically significant for the presence of lymph node metastases in the central cervical compartment relative to CEA values <30 ng/mL. |
| Hassan | 2018 | Single-center retrospective analysis | 83 | CEA preoperative tool in MTC assesment |
| Thomas/Goldstein | 2019 | Review | CEAcan be correlated with the prognosis of the disease preoperatively | |
| Zheng-Pywell | 2020 | Retrospective study | 88 | CEA should be evaluated in combination with calcitonin both preoperatively and postoperatively in MTC |
| Chen | 2020 | Case report | 1 | Persistent rise in CEA post-op for MTC is an indication ofmetastatic disease |
MTC: Medullary thyroid carcinoma; CEA: Carcinoembryonic antigen.
Take home message.
| Summary—Key Points |
|---|
| The correlation between the increase in CEA values and MTC is not a new observation. |
| New data concerning the embryonic origin of C cells (from which MTC is derived) from the endoderm of the primary anterior intestine and the ultimobranchial bodies, make MTC a neuroendocrine tumor. |
| CEA is not a specific biomarker of the disease in MTC, but its measurement is useful in assessing the progression of the disease, before and after thyroidectomy. |
| The increase in postoperative CEA values, which is not accompanied by a corresponding change in calcitonin values, is an indication of poorly differentiated MTC, disease pro-gression and poor prognosis. |
| Preoperative CEA values >30 ng/mL indicate extra-thyroid disease, while CEA values >100 ng/mL are associated with lymph node involvement and distant metastases. |
| Postoperative measurement of CEA in the follow-up of patients with MTC has become routine. |
| The increase in CEA values preoperatively has a positive correlation with larger size of primary tumor, with the presence of lymph nodes and distant metastases, but also with a poorer prognosis. |
| The clinical significance of CEA values for the surgeon is the optimal planning of surgical treatment and the extent of resection (total thyroidectomy + central cervical lymph node dissection+ unilateral lateral cervical lymph node dissection when CEA >30 mg). |
| Simultaneous measurement of calcitonin values is important, especially in cases of MTCs that do not secrete CEA, while their doubling time values may be used as an indication of disease progression. |
| Treatment with radiolabeled monoclonal antibodies against CEA (anti-CEA mAbs, pre-targeted radio-immunotherapy), with the help of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging, is the promising future in the diagnosis and treatment of metastatic MTC. |
| Persistent elevated CEA values after colon cancer surgery for and negative diagnostic workup for metastatic disease should raise a high clinical suspicion of developing MTC. |