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      Pretreatment serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen: a newly identified prognostic factor in early-stage cervical carcinoma.

      Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
      Antigens, Neoplasm, blood, Carcinoma, Squamous Cell, mortality, pathology, secondary, Female, Humans, Lymphatic Metastasis, Multivariate Analysis, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Neoplasm Staging, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Proportional Hazards Models, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Serpins, Survival Rate, Treatment Outcome, Tumor Markers, Biological, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms

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          Abstract

          To investigate the prognostic value of pretreatment serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCC-ag) levels in patients with cervical squamous cell carcinoma in relation to well-established conventional risk factors. Sera from 653 women treated for squamous cervical cancer between 1978 and 1994 were analyzed for the presence of SCC-ag and related to clinicopathologic characteristics and patient outcome using univariate and multivariate analyses. Increased pretreatment SCC-ag levels correlated strongly with unfavorable clinicopathologic characteristics (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics [FIGO] stages IB to IV [P < or = .00005]; stages IB and IIA: tumor size [P = .0236], deep stromal infiltration [P = .00009], and lymph node metastasis [P = .0001]). After multivariate analysis, elevated pretreatment serum SCC-ag levels (P = .001), lesion size (P = .043), and vascular invasion by tumor cells (P = .001) were independent predictors for the presence of lymph node metastases. In Cox regression analysis, controlling for SCC-ag, lesion size, grade, vascular invasion, depth of stromal infiltration, and lymph node status only the initial SCC-ag level had a significant independent effect on survival (P = .0152). Even in node-negative patients, the risk of recurrence was three times higher if the SCC-ag level was elevated before therapy. The determination of pretreatment serum SCC-ag level provides a new prognostic factor in early-stage disease, particularly in patients with small tumor size. In future trials to assess the value of new treatment strategies, pretreatment serum SCC-ag levels can be used to help identify patients with a poor prognosis.

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