The effect of CA125 on metastasis of ovarian cancer: Old marker new function

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Abstract

CA125 has been used extensively to screen for neoplasms, especially in ovarian cancer. The serum CA125 level can be used as a better prognosis evaluation and it may dynamic monitoring the disease progression. We explored the effect of CA125 on ovarian cancer cell migration and its underlying mechanism. Transwell assays showed that exposure to 0.2 μg/ml or 0.4 μg/ml CA125 for 48 h increased migration of A2780 and OVCAR-3 ovarian cancer cells. This effect of CA125 was blocked addition of 200 ng/ml DKK-1, a Wnt pathway inhibitor. Conversely, addition of CA125 reversed the inhibitory effect of Wnt inhibition in A2780 cells pretreated with DKK-1. Examination of CA125 levels in serum from 97 ovarian cancer patients revealed no relationship between a patient's age or CA125 level currently used clinically for ovarian cancer diagnosis and metastasis. However, using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, we identified a new cut-offvalue for the serum CA125 concentration (82.9 U/ml) that is predictive of metastasis. The area under the curve is 0.632. This new cut-offvalue has the potential to serve as a clinically useful indicator of metastasis in ovarian cancer patients.

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Yuan, Q., Song, J., Yang, W., Wang, H., Huo, Q., Yang, J., … Bao, H. (2017). The effect of CA125 on metastasis of ovarian cancer: Old marker new function. Oncotarget, 8(30), 50015–50022. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.18388

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