AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates whether serum SCCA levels can serve as clinical markers for monitoring the recurrence of sinonasal inverted papilloma (IP) after surgical treatment.
  • Researchers measured changes in SCCA levels in 25 patients post-surgery and examined their correlation with IP recurrence.
  • The results indicate that elevated SCCA levels after surgery are linked to a higher chance of IP recurrence, with a specific cut-off value of 1.85 ng/ml showing high accuracy in predicting future recurrences.

Article Abstract

Objectives: This study aimed to examine whether serum SCCA levels can be used as clinical markers for monitoring recurrence of sinonasal inverted papilloma (IP) during the follow-up period after surgery. We measured long-term changes in serum levels of SCCA after surgery in patients with IP and examined whether postoperative SCCA levels were associated with IP recurrence.

Methods: Twenty-five consecutive patients (13 with primary IPs and 12 with recurrent IPs after their previous surgery) were included in this study. All patients underwent endoscopic or external surgery. Postoperative serum SCCA levels were measured 3 months after surgery and every 3 - 12months during the follow-up. The optimal cut-off values of postoperative SCCA levels to predict subsequent recurrence of IP were evaluated using ROC analysis.

Results: Preoperative serum levels of SCCA were higher than the upper limit of normal range in most patients with both primary and recurrent IP, and significantly decreased after surgery. Thus, the presence of IP was closely associated with elevated serum SCCA levels. Moreover, postoperative elevation of SCCA levels was closely associated with subsequent recurrence of IP. Postoperative SCCA levels in 5 patients with recurrence were significantly higher than those in 20 patients without recurrence. The optimum cut-off value of SCCA levels to predict subsequent recurrence of IP 3 months after surgery was 1.85 ng/ml, with a sensitivity of 100.0 % and a specificity of 90.0 %.

Conclusions: These findings suggest that SCCA can be a tumor marker of IP. It is also suggested that postoperative elevation of SCCA levels is a clinical marker for monitoring the recurrence of IP during the follow-up period. A SCCA cut-off value of 1.85 ng/ml postoperatively may predict the subsequent recurrence of IP with high sensitivity and specificity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anl.2021.12.004DOI Listing

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