AI Article Synopsis

  • Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels are used to monitor metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) treatment, and this study aimed to establish a threshold for CEA change to predict progressive disease (PD) in patients receiving first-line therapy.
  • The research analyzed data from 2,643 mCRC patients, identifying optimal CEA change cutoffs using receiver operating characteristic analysis, and found significant differences in CEA percentage change between patients with PD and those with complete or partial responses.
  • Key findings included a clinically relevant CEA cutoff of -7.5% for chemotherapy alone and -62.0% for chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibodies, which could help predict outcomes and potentially reduce unnecessary imaging in a substantial portion of patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels are used in conjunction with imaging to monitor response to systemic therapy in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC). We sought to identify a threshold for CEA change from baseline to predict progressive disease (PD) in mCRC patients receiving first-line therapy.

Methods: Patients from trials collected in the ARCAD database were included if baseline CEA was at least 10 ng/mL and repeat CEA was available within 14 days of first restaging scan. Optimal cutoffs for CEA change were identified by receiver operating characteristic analysis. Prediction performance of cutoffs was evaluated by sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive value. Analyses were conducted by treatment class: chemotherapy alone, chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibody, and chemotherapy with anti-EGFR antibody.

Results: A total of 2643 mCRC patients treated with systemic therapy were included. Median percent change of CEA from baseline to first restaging for patients with complete response, partial response, or stable disease (non-PD) and PD was -53.1% and +23.6% for chemotherapy alone (n = 957) and -71.7% and -45.3% for chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibody (n = 1355). The optimal area under the curve cutoff for differentiating PD from non-PD on first restaging was -7.5% for chemotherapy alone and -62.0% for chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibody; chemotherapy alone, adjusted odds ratio = 6.51 (95% CI = 3.31 to 12.83, P < .001), chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibody, adjusted odds ratio = 3.45 (95% CI = 1.93 to 6.18, P < .001). A 99% negative predictive value clinical cutoff for prediction of non-PD would avoid CT scan at first restaging in 21.0% of chemotherapy alone and 16.2% of chemotherapy with anti-VEGF antibody-treated patients. Among patients with stable disease on first restaging, those with decreased CEA from baseline had statistically significantly improved progression-free and overall survival.

Conclusions: Change in CEA from baseline to first restaging can accurately predict non-progression and correlates with long-term outcomes in patients receiving systemic chemotherapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7669230PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jnci/djaa020DOI Listing

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