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Department of Medical Oncology, Mount Vernon Centre for Cancer Treatment, Northwood, Middlesex, United Kingdom
Correspondence: G.J.S. Rustin, M.D., Department of Medical Oncology, Mount Vernon Centre for Cancer Treatment, Rickmansworth Road, Northwood, Middlesex HA6 2RN, United Kingdom. Telephone: 01923-844700; Fax: 01923-844840; e-mail: rustin{at}mtvern.co.uk
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LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Top
Learning Objectives
Abstract
Introduction
CA125
Individual Patient Management
Clinical Trials
Conclusion
References
After completing this course, the reader will be able to:
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words. CA125 • Ovarian cancer • Response criteria
| INTRODUCTION |
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This paper reviews the evidence supporting the role of CA125 in disease assessment, describes its optimal use and limitations in both individual patient and clinical trial settings, and explains how, in certain circumstances, CA125 can replace standard response assessment. It does not, however, discuss the role of CA125 in screening, diagnosis, or prognosis.
| CA125 |
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| INDIVIDUAL PATIENT MANAGEMENT |
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25% over three samples is almost 100% specific for disease progression [7]. In order to use CA125 to monitor therapy, the value prior to starting chemotherapy should be twice the upper limit of normal (ULN) and rising after initial surgery. Debulking surgery or a paracentesis can, however, cause a temporary rise in CA125 levels [8]. Furthermore, the half-life for CA125 is approximately 6 days, and it is, therefore, important to appreciate that after initial surgery or, indeed, after ascitic drainage when large volumes of disease have been removed, the CA125 level, after an initial rise, will continue to fall for 3-6 weeks. This is the usual time of starting chemotherapy and, therefore, initial responses in CA125 should be regarded as resulting from a combination of surgery and chemotherapy.
Routine Follow-Up
A rising CA125 has been shown to predate clinical relapse by a median of 4 months in approximately 70% of patients [6, 9] and, therefore, may be an early indicator of disease relapse. In addition, tumor volume, performance status, and number of tumor lesions at relapse have also been shown to be independent prognostic factors for response and disease-free and overall survivals [10]. Therefore, one might speculate that early detection and treatment of relapsed disease, as indicated by a rising CA125, would be beneficial to overall survival. In addition, multiple admissions for symptoms of large volume disease, e.g., ascitic drainage, intestinal obstruction, and pain, may also be avoided. However, there is currently no evidence that early treatment based on a raised CA125 in asymptomatic patients improves either survival or symptom control. Many patients and clinicians are reassured by a normal CA125, however, this can be falsely reassuring, as small volume ovarian cancer is often associated with a normal CA125.
Disadvantages of routine CA125 measurements in follow-up include the anxiety generated by the regular blood tests required of patients which results in their loss of sleep prior to the next clinic visit. Such anxiety may even induce what some doctors call CA125 psychosis. Treatment for relapsed ovarian cancer is aimed at palliation of symptoms and prolongation of survival but is almost never curative. Therefore, treating early, when patients are symptom free, will result in more chemotherapy in the patients remaining life, and with this, more treatment-related toxicity. However, novel agents such as the new tyrosine kinase inhibitors may have potential for use as cytostatic therapy for the asymptomatic patient with a rising CA125.
These uncertainties are currently being addressed in a multicenter Medical Research Council/European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (MRC/EORTC) trial in which patients in remission from initial treatment have regular CA125 blood tests as part of their routine follow-up. These CA125 values are analyzed at accredited central laboratories, and both the patient and clinician are blinded from the result. Once the CA125 doubles from the ULN (precise values will differ slightly according to variation in assays), the patient is then randomized to receive either immediate treatment according to local standard practice, or treatment on clinical relapse (Fig. 1
). The primary end point for this study is overall survival, with quality of life and health economics designated as secondary end points. Quality of life (QL) is measured every 3 months by the widely used quality-of-life questionnaire, EORTC QLQ-C30 [11]. This is a 30-item general self-reporting questionnaire that incorporates five functional scales, a global QL scale, three symptom scales, and a number of single-item measures relating to ovarian cancer symptoms. This study has already accrued over 750 patients, but to obtain adequate statistical power will be continuing for some years.
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Confirming Disease Progression with CA125
In the presence of concerning symptoms or signs, CA125 has been shown to accurately diagnose disease progression. Several definitions of progression according to CA125 have been proposed. A rise of 50%, 100%, or just to above normal range have all been shown to be predictive of relapse [1, 2, 6, 12], but only one definition has been extensively validated. Rustin et al. [13] showed that, in a study of 255 patients in routine follow-up from initial chemotherapy, a confirmed doubling of CA125 from its ULN predicted progression with a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 98%. This translates to less than 2% of patients receiving unnecessary second-line treatment, and if patients also had symptoms suggestive of recurrence, it is unlikely that any patients would be treated unnecessarily.
CT scans are often used in clinical practice to confirm progression suggested by symptoms and CA125 rise. However, CT scans are unable to detect disease less than 1 cm in size and, therefore, will miss the widespread miliary peritoneal disease so often seen in these patients at relapse. In addition, a rising CA125 has a median lead time of 63 days prior to the date of relapse as identified by standard criteria [13]. van der Burg et al. also demonstrated that CA125 together with routine general and pelvic examinations predicted relapse in 92% of patients, with routine radiological investigations only contributing to 8% [6].
With such a small false-positive rate, it is our recommendation that doubling of the CA125 from the ULN or nadir is sufficient to diagnose disease progression (see later text) without the need for confirmatory imaging. Before acting upon the CA125 level, it is important to confirm its elevation with a second sample. However, CA125 levels can rise in patients with abdominal pain from adhesions following intraperitoneal therapy or in coexisting conditions, such as endometriosis. Clearly, in this group of patients, a CT scan is warranted to exclude disease relapse before instigating potentially unnecessary chemotherapy.
| CLINICAL TRIALS |
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Many patients with advanced ovarian cancer, however, present with nonevaluable disease according to the above criteria. The advantage, then, of defining response according to CA125 and introducing this criteria into clinical trials is that more women who were previously ineligible under standard response criteria are now eligible for entry into new drug trials.
Definition of CA125 Response
Many definitions of CA125 response have been proposed [1719], but only one, by Rustin et al., has been retrospectively validated [13]. The initial CA125 response criteria were derived from 277 patients within the North Thames Ovary trial comparing maintenance radiotherapy with carboplatin. For each patient, CA125 percentage falls were examined by a computer program and, to reduce false-positive prediction of response to <2%, it was decided to classify patients according to CA125 by either a 50% fall over four samples or a 75% fall over three samples. In both definitions, the final confirmatory sample has to be analyzed at least 28 days after the previous sample, and the initial CA125 value must be
40 units/ml (Table 1
). Once these 50% and 75% CA125 response criteria had been established, they were then tested in two other patient groups254 patients in the North Thames Ovary five versus eight trial [20] and 458 patients in the Gynecologic Oncology Group (GOG) protocol 97, which both investigated dose-intense versus standard chemotherapy. Of all 620 patients assessable by CA125 criteria, only two patients (0.3%) showed a CA125 response with clinical progression. In the GOG trial, CA125 response rate was 66% in all 317 patients assessable by CA125 criteria and 67% in 221 patients nonmeasurable according to GOG standard criteria. This is comparable with the GOG-defined response rate of 62%. A recent retrospective analysis looked at how accurate the response rates obtained using the 50% and 75% response definitions were at predicting the activity of drugs in phase II trials for ovarian cancer compared with the response rates obtained by standard criteria [21]. In this analysis, data were obtained from 25 treatment groups within 19 phase II clinical trials looking at 14 different cytotoxic drugs for relapsed ovarian cancer (Table 2
). Response rates were estimated in 1,457 assessable patients according to standard criteria and in 1,092 assessable patients according to CA125. Results showed that there was no statistically significant difference between response rates obtained by standard and CA125 criteria and, therefore, there was no difference in accurately predicting whether a phase II drug was active and worth pursuing in further clinical trials.
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Concern has been raised by several authors that CA125 response may be altered by certain drugs, including paclitaxel [23, 24]. Bridgewater et al. [25], however, reanalyzed the data from four trials of paclitaxel as first- or second-line therapy using the 50% and 75% response criteria as stated above. In 144 patients treated, the response rates according to standard criteria and CA125 criteria were equivalent (30.7% versus 31.7%). Furthermore, the false-positive rate was 2.9% with paclitaxel and 2.2% with cisplatin, suggesting that precise CA125 response criteria behave similarly with the two drugs. In another study by Eisenhauer et al. [26], CA125 appeared to overestimate the response to paclitaxel; however, when these results were reanalyzed using precise CA125 response definitions, the response rates according to standard criteria and CA125 criteria were comparable. The disparity between this and previous studies is thought, in part, to be due to the large variability seen with weekly CA125 measurements, perhaps due to tumor lysis, and the difference between precise and more simple definitions.
The above data therefore clearly identify CA125 as an accurate, reliable, and cheap means of assessing response. They also show how, in the majority of circumstances, it can replace the need for expensive and time-consuming radiological assessment.
Definition of CA125 Progression
In many clinical trials of first- and second-line treatment for ovarian cancer in which progression-free survival is often the primary end point, it is well known that many investigators will instigate second-line treatment according to a rise in serum CA125 levels before overt clinical signs of progression. This, then, causes great confusion when deciding the date of disease progression, with wide variability among different trial groups in what to do with the data. Some groups will include these patients in the progressive disease population, other groups will censor these patients, and others will ignore treatment before the documented date of clinical progression altogether. The Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup (GCIG), therefore, proposed that a precise CA125 definition of progression be used as a secondary end point in first-line therapy randomized trials [27]. The precise CA125 definition of progression they accepted was the definition previously validated by Rustin and colleagues [9] (Table 3
). This was initially derived from patients receiving first-line treatments for ovarian cancer within the North Thames Ovary Group trials and is based on how the CA125 level behaves during first-line treatment. This definition accurately predicts progression in patients whose CA125 level initially falls to normal on first treatment and then doubles from the ULN. In patients whose baseline CA125 level after first-line treatment is not in the normal range, a doubling from the nadir value is also an accurate predictor of progression, with a false-positive of <2% [28]. The date of progression is defined as either the date of the first doubling of CA125 or the date of progression according to RECIST criteria. If both criteria are met, the first of the two dates is documented as the date of progression.
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The Use of CA125 Criteria in Future Clinical Trials
In the guidelines outlining the new RECIST criteria, Therasse et al. discussed the role of combining standardized tumor marker response definitions with the RECIST response criteria in future clinical trials. In the case of ovarian cancer trials, this has the advantage of evaluating more patients according to CA125 or RECIST or by both criteria. However, the CA125 response and progression criteria were derived from known data sets and have been retrospectively validated. Therefore, at present, in order to use CA125 response criteria as a secondary end point in clinical trial design, it should be discussed with the regulatory authorities before incorporating in a trial protocol. Examples of the use of the CA125 response and progression definitions in recently published data include the phase II trials for oral altretamine in relapsed ovarian carcinoma [30] and the use of weekly cisplatin and oral etoposide in relapsed ovarian cancer [31].
The initial aim of any phase II trial is to determine whether the activity of a drug is sufficient to justify further investigation. If response rates according to CA125 are lower than a predetermined threshold efficacy, the drug should be rejected and further studies are not necessary. However, if response rates according to CA125 are satisfactory, the patient numbers within the trial should be expanded allowing sufficient patients to be evaluated by both CA125 and RECIST criteria.
Having decided to incorporate CA125 criteria into future trials, a standardized CA125 definition must be used. The GCIG has recently proposed a simplified CA125 definition that just uses the 50% response criteria. This requires two pretreatment CA125 levels greater than or equal to twice the ULN, with samples taken at least 1 week and not more than 3 months apart, with one of the two samples being taken within 1 week of starting treatment. The GCIG is very keen that this new 50% CA125 response definition be tested in a wide variety of new phase II trials to facilitate prospective validation and general acceptance. Details on the complete definition and method of analyzing data can be obtained by contacting Gordon Rustin (see contact details) or Monica Bacon (mbacon{at}ctg.queensu.ca).
| CONCLUSION |
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| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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M Candelaria, D Gallardo-Rincon, C Arce, L Cetina, J. Aguilar-Ponce, O Arrieta, A Gonzalez-Fierro, A Chavez-Blanco, E de la Cruz-Hernandez, M. Camargo, et al. A phase II study of epigenetic therapy with hydralazine and magnesium valproate to overcome chemotherapy resistance in refractory solid tumors Ann. Onc., September 1, 2007; 18(9): 1529 - 1538. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. J. S. Rustin, R. C. Bast Jr., G. J. Kelloff, J. C. Barrett, S. K. Carter, P. D. Nisen, C. C. Sigman, D. R. Parkinson, and R. W. Ruddon Use of CA-125 in Clinical Trial Evaluation of New Therapeutic Drugs for Ovarian Cancer Clin. Cancer Res., June 1, 2004; 10(11): 3919 - 3926. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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