Affiliation:
1. First Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Bari, Italy
2. Institute of Hygiene, University Medical School, Bari, Italy
Abstract
Aims and background High ferritin serum levels have been reported in patients suffering from various malignancies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of ferritinemia in the preoperative diagnosis of ovarian carcinoma. Methods Between March 1993 and September 1996, 60 patients suffering from ovarian carcinoma were surgically treated at our Department. Their ferritin serum levels were measured preoperatively by a solid-phase, two-site chemiluminescent immunometric assay and compared with those of a group of 60 healthy, age-matched, non pregnant controls. Results The mean serum concentration of ferritin was 54.7 ± 7.8 ng/ml (range, 14–135) in healthy controls and 112.3 ± 21.2 ng/ml (range, 9–947) in patients with ovarian carcinoma. The difference was statistically significant (P = 0.005, X2 test = 7.951). Serum ferritin was elevated preoperatively (cutoff ≥ 120 ng/ml) in 18/60 patients with malignancy (sensitivity 30%), whereas the CA 125 levels were above the cutoff in 53/60 patients (sensitivity 88.3%). Only 2/60 women of the control group had ferritin titers > 120 ng/ml (specificity 96.7%). The ferritin levels increased with advancing disease stage; no significant correlation was found between ferritin concentration and neoplastic histology and grading. The mean serum iron levels were also measured preoperatively in patients with ovarian carcinoma and healthy controls. They were 57.2 ± 3.8 and 66.3 ± 2.61 μg/dl, respectively, and the difference was not significant (P = 0.655, X2 test= 0.200). Conclusions The present study underlines that although ferritin shows an elevated specificity, its low sensitivity does not suggest any true usefulness as a tumor marker in epithelial ovarian cancer.
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology,General Medicine
Cited by
6 articles.
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