Microarray Glycoprofiling
of CA125 Improves Differential Diagnosis of Ovarian Cancer
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Abstract
The CA125 biomarker assay plays an important role
in the diagnosis and management of primary invasive epithelial ovarian/tubal
cancer (iEOC). However, a fundamental problem with CA125 is that it
is not cancer-specific and may be elevated in benign gynecological
conditions such as benign ovarian neoplasms and endometriosis. Aberrant
O-glycosylation is an inherent and specific property of cancer cells
and could potentially aid in differentiating cancer from these benign
conditions, thereby improving specificity of the assay. We report
on the development of a novel microarray-based platform for profiling
specific aberrant glycoforms, such as Neu5Acα2,6GalNAc (STn)
and GalNAc (Tn), present on CA125 (MUC16) and CA15-3 (MUC1). In a
blinded cohort study of patients with an elevated CA125 levels
(30–500 kU/L) and a pelvic mass from the UK Ovarian Cancer
Population Study (UKOPS), we measured STn-CA125, ST-CA125 and STn-CA15-3.
The combined glycoform profile was able to distinguish benign ovarian
neoplasms from invasive epithelial ovarian/tubule cancer (iEOCs)
with a specificity of 61.1% at 90% sensitivity. The findings suggest
that microarray glycoprofiling could improve differential diagnosis
and significantly reduce the number of patients elected for further
testing. The approach warrants further investigation in other cancers