Background: To clarify clinical importance of serum CA19-9, CA-125, and plasma D-dimer (D-D) levels in detecting spontaneously ruptured ovarian endometriosis (OE). Materials and Methods: We retrospectively examined 173 patients with endometriosis out of 735 cases of OE between 2013 and 2019. Among these, 21 cases were diagnosed as “spontaneously ruptured” after surgery, while the remaining cases were unruptured. Venous blood was collected pre-operatively to detect CA19-9, CA-125, and D-D levels. A receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was applied to test clinical value of each marker. Results: Among the 21 patients with ruptured OE, 16 had a history of pelvic cysts, 19 claimed sudden onsets of lower abdominal pain, and fluid accumulation were detected in cul-de-sac in only six participants by ultrasound. For serological investigation, both CA19-9 and D-D were significantly elevated in the ruptured OE group (343.09 ± 367.67 U/ml vs. 36.84 ± 40.01 U/ml, 3.39 ± 4.90 mg/L vs. 0.43 ± 0.29 mg/L, both p
CITATION STYLE
Shuang, T., Wang, Y., Zhao, L., Zhang, K., Yin, P., Guo, L., … Li, Q. (2022). Extremely high serum CA19-9 level along with elevated D-dimer in assisting detection of ruptured ovarian endometriosis. Annals of Medicine, 54(1), 1444–1451. https://doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2074534
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