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?????????? - Balasthavath Kreeda aasaktah
- tarunasthaavath taruneesaktah
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- Parame brahmani kopinasaktah
- As medical students we were playful wasted time
- As young doctors, were preoccupied with family,
spouse - As older docs, we have enough worries, nothing
goes in - Alas, when are we to gain an update of our
knowledge!!
2Tumor Markers
www.drsarma.in
Dr R V S N Sarma MD., M.Sc. (Canada),
FIMSA Cardio-Metabolic Specialist And Consultant
Physician
3Tumor GeneticsTumor ImmunologyTumor Markers
4Tumor GeneticsTumor ImmunologyTumor Markers
5(No Transcript)
6Chromosome Abnormalities
7DNA Abnormalities
8RNA Abnormalities
9Protein Abnormalities
10Tumor GeneticsTumor ImmunologyTumor Markers
11Etiology of Cancers
12Etiology of Cancers
- Inherited Expression of inherited oncogene
- e.g. viral gene incorporated into host gene
- Viral Human papilloma, herpes type 2, HBV, EBV
(DNA) - Human T-cell leukemia virus (RNA) - Chemical
- - Poly cyclic hydrocarbons cause sarcomas
- - Aromatic amines cause mammary carcinoma
- - Alkyl nitroso amines cause hepatoma
- Radiological Ultraviolet ionizing irradiation
- Spontaneous Failure in cellular growth control
13Tumor Immunology
- Pathological Ca cell masses are formed by
- Abnormal uncontrolled expansion of clones of
single cell - Transformation of normal cells to cancer cells
- Spontaneous mutation during daily cell division
- It may be induced by carcinogens (chem, virus)
- Ca cell antigens are different from normal cells
- Recognized and destroyed by immune system
14Immune Surveillance System
- During neoplastic transformation, new Ag develop
- The host recognizes them as non-self antigens
- Cell mediated immune reactions attack these
non-self tumor cells - Immune response acts as surveillance system to
- Detect and eliminate newly arising neoplastic
cells
15Immune Surveillance System
- This system include
- 1. Natural killer (NK) cells
- They kill directly tumor cells, helped by
Inf, IL-2 - 2. Cytotoxic T-cells
- They also kill directly tumor cells
- 3. Cell mediated T-cells (effector T-cells)
- They produce and release a variety of
lymphokines - a-Macrophage activation factor, activates
macrophage - b-Gamma interferon and interleukin-2 that
activate NK - c-Tumor necrosis factor (cachectine)
16Immune Surveillance System
- 4. B-cells
- - Tumor associated antigens stimulate
production of - specific antibodies by host B-cells
- - These specific antibodies bind together on
tumor cell - surface leading to destruction of tumor
through - a- Antibody mediated cytotoxicity
- Cytotoxic T-cells kill IgG-coated tumor
cells - b- Sensitized T-cells activate macrophages
and release - macrophage activating factor
- c- IgG-coated tumor cells attacked by
macrophages, in turn - d- Activation of classical pathway of
complement leading - to lysis of tumor cells
17Tumor Escape
- Tumor escape of immune defenses
- 1. Reduced levels or absence of MHCI molecule
- on tumor - they cant be recognized by
CTLs - 2. Some tumors stop expressing the antigens
- These tumors are called antigen loss
variants - 3. Production of immunosuppressive factors by
tumor e.g. transforming growth factor (TGF-ß) - 4. Tumor antigens may induce specific immunologic
tolerance by the immune system
18Tumor Escape
- 5. Tumor cells have an inherent defect in antigen
processing and presentation - 6. Blocking of receptors on T-cells by specific
antigen antibodies complex (after shedding of
tumor Ag) prevents them from recognizing and
attacking tumor cells - 7. Antigens on the surface of tumors may be
masked by sialic acid-containing
mucopolysaccharides - 8. Immune suppression of the host as in
transplant patients who show a higher
incidence of malignancy
19Tumor GeneticsTumor ImmunologyTumor Markers
20What are Tumor Markers?
- Biological substances synthesized and released by
cancer cells themselves or - Produced by the host in response to the presence
of tumor - Most tumor markers are proteins
- Detected in a solid tumor, in circulating tumor
cells in peripheral blood, in serum, lymph nodes,
in bone marrow, or in other body fluid (urine,
stool, ascites)
21Definition
- Glyco/lipoproteins produced by
- malignant cells
- normal cells in response to tumor
- inflammatory cells and tissues
- found in serum, urine, body fluids
- react with man-made antibodies or
- combine with man-made antigens
- cyto/histocompatibility reaction to form
- cyto/histocompatibility complexes
22When are they useful ?
23The Various Putative Utilities
- Screening To identify early cancer risk
- Diagnosis To corroborate the diagnosis
- Staging To assess stratify the risk
- Prognosis To predict the outcome
- Localization To locate the primary
- Therapy To target the therapy
- Surveillance To detect recurrence in F-Up
- Monitoring To evaluate response to Rx.
24Tumor Markers - Drawbacks
- Cancer heterogeneity
- Lack of Specificity false positives
- Lack of Sensitivity - false negatives
- Benign diseases - positive CA 125 or CEA
- Smokers have raised CEA
- Normal persons also have small amounts
- Higher levels only with large tumor volume
- Some cancers never have higher levels
25Tumor Markers
26Types of Tumor Markers
- Tumour-Associated Proteins (TAP)
- Cell membrane receptors
- Hormones
- Immunoglobulins / Cellular antigens
- Polyamines
- Protein clusters and fragments
- Chromosomal material
- Genes (single, clusters)
- Genetic material (DNA, RNA, mRNA)
- Cell modulators (transducers / suppressors)
27Tumor Associated Antigens
- 1. Viral Antigen
- a- Viral proteins and glycoproteins
- b- New antigens produced by virally infected
host cells under control of viral nucleic acid - 2. Tumor specific antigens
- - Tumor cells develop new antigens specific
to - their carcinogens
- 3. Tumor specific transplantation antigens
- - Tumor cells express new MHC antigens due to
- alteration of normally present MHC antigens
28Tumor Associated Antigens
- 4. Oncofetal antigens
- a- Carcino-embryonic antigens (CEA)
- - Normally expressed during fetal life on
fetal gut - - Reappearance in adult life
- GIT, pancreas, biliary system and cancer
breast - b- Alpha fetoprotein
- - Normally expressed in fetal life
- - Reappearance in adult life hepatoma
29Tumor Products
- A. Hormones
- Human Chorionic Gonadotrophins (HCG) are
secreted in Choriocarcinoma, Ovarian Ca - Thyroxin is secreted in thyroid cancer
- B. Enzymes
- Acid phosphatase in prostate cancer
- Alkaline phosphatase, lipase and amylase
- enzymes in cases of cancer of pancreas
30Specific Classes of Tumor Markers
- Enzymes (PSA, NSE, VMA, HVA)
- Cell membrane receptors (ER, PR)
- Tumor antigens (CEA, AFP)
- Antibodies (IgA, IgG, IgM, IgD)
- Antigens (p53, ki-62)
- CA-specific proteins(CA 19-9, CA 124)
- Gene mutation products (BR CA 1, 2)
31Specific Classes of Tumor Markers
- Tissue-specific proteins (PSA, hCGH)
- Special hormones (b-hCGH, h-CGH)
- Catecholamines (VMA, HVA, ACTH)
- Polyamines
- Cytoplasmic / Nucleic material (DNA)
- Products of cell turn-over (TNF)
- Cellular modulators (ki-62, c-erb-2)
32How to Detect Tumor Markers?
- ELISA
- Immuno-histochemistry (IHC)
- Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
- Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)
- Cluster Kits ( All-in-One Kit)
- Detects profiles
- Patterns
- Prototypes
- Constellations
33Methods of Analysis
- Expression of single proteins
- Expression of multiple proteins
- Chip analysis All-in-One
- Expression of protein profiles
- (Proteonomics)
- Gene methylation at DNA level
- Genes / mutations (Genomics)
- G-scan (genome ID scan)
34Common Markers In Clinical Practice
- hCGH (specific)
- beta-hCGH (specific)
- CEA (NS)
- AFP (NS)
- Bence-Jones (MM)
- Beta-2-M (S)
- BTA (Bladder) (S)
- CgA (Chromogranin-A)
- CA-15-3 (NS)
- CA-19-9 (NS)
- 11. CA-72-4 (NS)
- 12. CA-27.29 (NS)
- 13. CA-125 (NS)
- ER / PR (Breast)
- 15. HER-2 neu (c-erbB-2)
- BR CA-1 / BR CA-2
35Some more Markers In Clinical Practice
- Alk. ptase (mets)
- Alpha Amylase
- SIADH, ACTH, ADH
- GT-II (NS)
- VMA, HVA (S)
- Polyamines (NS)
- Genes (k-ras, ki-62)
- Chromosome (p53)
- LASA-P (S)
- NM-22 (S)
- PSA (Prostate-S)
- PSMA (Prostate-S)
- S-100 (Melanoma)
- TA-90 (NS)
- TgA, IgA, D, G, M
- TPA (NS)
36Tumor Markers PSA
- Prostate Specific Antigen(PSA) is a glycoprotein
- Ideal as a tumor marker, high tissue specificity
- High sensitivity for prostate cancer
- Also elevated in BPH prostatitis
- Useful in
- Dx. follow up of prostate Ca, Prognostic factor
- To monitor recurrence response to treatment
- ? For screening of prostate cancer along with
DRE
37Prostate Cancer PSA
- Free PSAPSA not bound to the plasma anti
proteases a1-antichymotrypsin a2-macroglobulin - An ?in ratio of free/total PSA is associated with
increased probability of prostate cancer - 97 specificity, 96 sensitivity for prostate Ca
- For population screening and diagnosis an
increase of 0.75 ng/ml per year in any given
patient has high sensitivity and specificity for
prostate cancer vs BPH, especially when combined
with DRE and TRUS
38Tumor Markers CA-125
- 80 of non mucinous ovarian cancer detected by
the monoclonal antibody to CA-125 - Elevated in Ovarian, Endometrial, Pancreatic,
Lung, Breast, Colon cancers and also in - Menstruation, Pregnancy, Endometriosis and other
gynecological and non gynec conditions. - Useful in monitoring ovarian Ca recurrence Rx.
- Screening of high risk population (BRCA1-2
Carriers) Not useful for routine screening
39Ovarian Cancer CA-125
- Cell surface glycoprotein, present during
embryonic development of coelomic epithelium is
present in adult structures derived from it - For follow up, an increase may predict recurrent
disease, precedes clinical recurrence by months - gt80 of epithelial ovarian cancer, cell types
serous gt endometriod, clear cell gt mucinous - Correlates with tumor bulk,
- In Endometriosis most common
- ? levels also found in PID, 1st trimester
40Tumor Markers AFP
- Alfa Feto Protein is a serum fetal protein
synthesized by the liver, yolk sac,
gastrointestinal tract a glycoprotein - In Hepatocellular Cancer It is diagnostic (gt500)
and also useful for screening of high risk
population (HBV, HCV) - Benign conditions hepatic parenchymal
inflammation, hepatic necrosis, pregnancy,
primary biliary cirrhosis, extra hepatic biliary
obstruction give positive test. - Testicular germ cell tumor (embrional or
endodermal) - Diagnosis, Prognosis, to monitor recurrence
response - The absolute AFP level correlates with tumor bulk
- Cancers of pancreas, colon, stomach
bronchogenic Ca
41Tumor Markers CEA
- Complex glycoprotein that is associated with the
plasma membrane of tumor cells, from which it
may be released in to the blood - Elevated specially in Colon cancer, Adeno. Ca
uterus - Normal pre Rx CEA indicates no metastasis
- Also in Pancreatic, Gastric, Lung, breast
Ovarian Ca - Also in cirrhosis, inflammatory bowel disease,
chronic lung disease, pancreatitis, fibrocystic
breast disease - 19 of smokers, 3 of healthy population
- Not satisfactory for screening for a healthy
population - Good for monitoring recurrence to monitor Rx.
42Tumor Markers CA 19-9
- CA 19-9 is elevated in
- In 21-42 patients of gastric Ca
- In 20-40 patients of colonic Ca
- In 71-93 patients of pancreatic Ca
- For DD of benign from malignant disease
- Dx, FU, Relapse, 70 specificity 90
sensitivity - It is a mucin, does not ? during pregnancy
- Monitor patients who do not express CA 125,
mucinous (76) gt serous (27)
43ßeta HCG
- Human chorionic gonodotropin (ßHCG)
- Glycoprotein synthesized by syncytio
trophoblastic cells of normal placenta - Serum and urine HCG ? in early gestation and peak
in the first trimester (6090 days) - Elevated in Gestational trophoblastic disease (a
progressive rise in after 90 days of gestation ?
highly suggestive), choriocarcinoma - Elevated in testicular cancer, ßHCG after surgery
- Monitor treatment response, relapse recurrence
44Breast Cancer and ER
- Estrogen Receptor (ER)
- 2 isoformsERa and ERb
- ERa ? better prognosis, predictor of relapse
- useful when deciding on adjuvant hormone
treatment - As diagnostic marker when it is a primary unknown
tumor - ERb ? Good prognostic factor, correlates with low
grade and negative axillary LN status
45Breast Cancer Oncogenes
- HER-2/neu oncogene (using monoclonal antibody) -
over expression related to poor prognosis in
breast cancer - Oncogene c-erbB-2 geneover expressed in 30 of
breast cancers, correlation between c-erbB-2
gene positivity, positive axillary node status,
reduced time to relapse and reduced overall
survival - BRCA1 gene on chromosome 17qfamilial
breast-ovarian cancer syndrome, and breast cancer
in early-onset breast cancer families ? high risk
screening
46Breast Cancer and CA15-3
- - To monitor Rx. to detect recurrence BR Ca
- ? in 20 with localized breast cancer, 80 with
metastatic disease, esp. if with bone involvement - Specificity of 86, sensitivity of 30
- Also ? in gastric, pancreatic, cervical lung
cancer - c-erbB-2 overexpression should be evaluated on
every primary breast cancer either at the time of
diagnosis or at the time of recurrence.
47Melanoma
- Tyrosinase
- Use RT-PCR to detect hematogenous spread of
melanoma cells from a solid tumor in peripheral
blood - S100B protein
- For confirmation of amelanotic malignant melanoma
by immunohistology - ?in 70 with stage IV metastasized melanoma
- MIA (melanoma inhibitory activity)
- Preoperative 59 at stage III, 89 at stage IV
48Thyroid Cancer
- Thyroglobulin
- Tissue-specific, glycoprotein produced by thyroid
follicular cells - Also increased in breast or lung cancer
- Thyrocalcitonin
- From thyroid C cells medullary thyroid cancer
- Effective to screen patients with 1st degree
relatives affected by medullary thyroid cancer
and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2)
49Lymphoma
- Burkitts type lymphoma and leukemia
- T (814) due to juxtaposition and activation of
the c-myc gene - CD 25 most sensitive serum marker for tumor
burden - CD 44 high concentration indicates poor prognosis
- Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
- Normal 100250 IU/L
- High-grade lymphomas, blood levels correlate
closely with disease activity and response to
therapy
50Neuroendocrine Tumors
- Neuron-specific enolase (NSE)
- A neuronal isoenzyme of cytoplasmic enzyme
enolase, in neuroendocrine cells - As a prognostic factor in neuroblastoma
- Occurs in neuroendocrine tumors medullary
carcinoma of the thyroid, pheochromocytoma,
carcinoid tumors immature teratoma, small cell
carcinoma of lung, non-small-cell cancer,
melanoma. Correlate with stage and bulk of
disease - N-myc oncogene in neuroblastoma N-myc copy number
is associated with stage and prognosis
51Tumor Specific Proteins
- Expressed only in tumor cells
- Example an oncogene is translocated and fused
to an active promoter of another gene ? fusion
proteins ? constant active production ?
development of malignant clone - Philadelphia chromosome in CML, t(922)
- (q34q11) bcr/abl translocation
- t(821) acute non-lymphocytic leukemia,
- t(1517) in APL
- Hematological malignancies
52Philadelphia Chromosome
- Abnormal Chromosome
- Due to translocation
- t (922) Ph short Chrom
- bcr/abl fusion gene
- This takes place in a single bone marrow cell
- Creating fusion proteins
- Detected by FISH technique
- Philadelphia chromosome in ALL - poor prognosis
53Philadelphia Chromosome
54New Frontiers
- Genomics Gene structure
- Proteonomics Protein structure
- Pharmacogenomics
- Gene-based drugs structuring and delivery
- G-scan Human genome mapping
- New treatment modalities
- Individualised treatment modalities
- Early detection of malignant change
- Greater sensitivity and specificity
- Better monitoring and follow-up care
55Common Tumor Markers
- 1. Alpha fetoprotein antigen (AFP) in hepatoma
- Carcino-Embryoinic Antigen (CEA) in GI tumors
- CEA in tumors of biliary system and cancer breast
- 4. Cancer Antigen 125 (CA 125) in ovarian
carcinoma - Cancer Antigen 15-3 (CA15-3) in breast cancer
- Cancer Antigen 19-9 in colon and pancreatic tumor
- 7. Prostatic specific antigen (PSA) -
prostatic tumors
56Common Tumor Markers
57Thank You All
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