Abstract
Tissues of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) can express hepatoma-specific γ-glutamyltransferase (GGT) and secrete GGT into circulating blood. Serum GGT was separated into several bands (up to 11), including hepatoma-specific hands (HSBs, I', II, and II') by a vertical slab electrophoresis assay of polyacrylamide stage gradient gel. In the present study, the HSBs of serum GGT were separated, and the HSB activity was quantitatively measured in 91 patients with HCC and compared with that of 106 patients with benign liver disease, 16 patients with extrahepatic tumors, and 30 healthy control subjects. Significant differences of the HSB activity were observed between the HCC group and each study group. An HSB activity greater than 5.5 U/L seems to be diagnostic of HCC. The quantitative method has a sensitivity of 85.3, a specificity of 97.2%, positive predictive value of 95.1%, a negative predictive value of 91.2%, and an accuracy of 92.5% for detecting HCC. No correlation was found between HSB activity and the serum α-fetoprotein (AFP) level or tumor size in patients with HCC. The quantitative analysis of HSB activity of GGT is superior to detection of the AFP concentration and is useful in early diagnosis of small HCC or AFP-negative HCC.
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Yao, D. F., Huang, Z. W., Chen, S. Z., Huang, J. F., Lu, J. X., Xiao, M. B., & Meng, X. Y. (1998). Diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma by quantitative detection of hepatoma-specific bands of serum γ-glutamyltransferase. American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 110(6), 743–749. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/110.6.743
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