TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of a multimarker assay for early detection of ovarian cancer
AU - Yurkovetsky, Zoya
AU - Skates, Steven
AU - Lomakin, Aleksey
AU - Nolen, Brian
AU - Pulsipher, Trenton
AU - Modugno, Francesmary
AU - Marks, Jeffrey
AU - Godwin, Andrew
AU - Gorelik, Elieser
AU - Jacobs, Ian
AU - Menon, Usha
AU - Lu, Karen
AU - Badgwell, Donna
AU - Bast, Robert C.
AU - Lokshin, Anna E.
N1 - CA086381, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesCA105009, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesP50 CA083639, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01 CA098642, NCI NIH HHS, United StatesR01 CA108990, NCI NIH HHS, United States
PY - 2010/5/1
Y1 - 2010/5/1
N2 - Purpose: Early detection of ovarian cancer has great promise to improve clinical outcome. Patients and Methods: Ninety-six serum biomarkers were analyzed in sera from healthy women and from patients with ovarian cancer, benign pelvic tumors, and breast, colorectal, and lung cancers, using multiplex xMAP bead-based immunoassays. A Metropolis algorithm with Monte Carlo simulation (MMC) was used for analysis of the data. Results: A training set, including sera from 139 patients with early-stage ovarian cancer, 149 patients with late-stage ovarian cancer, and 1,102 healthy women, was analyzed with MMC algorithm and cross validation to identify an optimal biomarker panel discriminating early-stage cancer from healthy controls. The four-biomarker panel providing the highest diagnostic power of 86% sensitivity (SN) for early-stage and 93% SN for late-stage ovarian cancer at 98% specificity (SP) was comprised of CA-125, HE4, CEA, and VCAM-1. This model was applied to an independent blinded validation set consisting of sera from 44 patients with early-stage ovarian cancer, 124 patients with late-stage ovarian cancer, and 929 healthy women, providing unbiased estimates of 86% SN for stage I and II and 95% SN for stage III and IV disease at 98% SP. This panel was selective for ovarian cancer showing SN of 33% for benign pelvic disease, SN of 6% for breast cancer, SN of 0% for colorectal cancer, and SN of 36% for lung cancer. Conclusion: A panel of CA-125, HE4, CEA, and VCAM-1, after additional validation, could serve as an initial stage in a screening strategy for epithelial ovarian cancer. © 2010 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
AB - Purpose: Early detection of ovarian cancer has great promise to improve clinical outcome. Patients and Methods: Ninety-six serum biomarkers were analyzed in sera from healthy women and from patients with ovarian cancer, benign pelvic tumors, and breast, colorectal, and lung cancers, using multiplex xMAP bead-based immunoassays. A Metropolis algorithm with Monte Carlo simulation (MMC) was used for analysis of the data. Results: A training set, including sera from 139 patients with early-stage ovarian cancer, 149 patients with late-stage ovarian cancer, and 1,102 healthy women, was analyzed with MMC algorithm and cross validation to identify an optimal biomarker panel discriminating early-stage cancer from healthy controls. The four-biomarker panel providing the highest diagnostic power of 86% sensitivity (SN) for early-stage and 93% SN for late-stage ovarian cancer at 98% specificity (SP) was comprised of CA-125, HE4, CEA, and VCAM-1. This model was applied to an independent blinded validation set consisting of sera from 44 patients with early-stage ovarian cancer, 124 patients with late-stage ovarian cancer, and 929 healthy women, providing unbiased estimates of 86% SN for stage I and II and 95% SN for stage III and IV disease at 98% SP. This panel was selective for ovarian cancer showing SN of 33% for benign pelvic disease, SN of 6% for breast cancer, SN of 0% for colorectal cancer, and SN of 36% for lung cancer. Conclusion: A panel of CA-125, HE4, CEA, and VCAM-1, after additional validation, could serve as an initial stage in a screening strategy for epithelial ovarian cancer. © 2010 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/77952315345
U2 - 10.1200/JCO.2008.19.2484
DO - 10.1200/JCO.2008.19.2484
M3 - Article
C2 - 20368574
SN - 1527-7755
VL - 28
SP - 2159
EP - 2166
JO - Journal of Clinical Oncology
JF - Journal of Clinical Oncology
IS - 13
ER -