Journal List > Yonsei Med J > v.57(3) > 1031976

Lee, Chang, Yoo, Lee, Chay, Cho, Kim, Kim, and Kim: Clinical Significance of CA125 Level after the First Cycle of Chemotherapy on Survival of Patients with Advanced Ovarian Cancer

Abstract

Purpose

To determine the most powerful cancer antigen 125 (CA125)-related prognostic factor for advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and to identify cut-off values that distinguish patients with a poor prognosis from those with a good prognosis.

Materials and Methods

We included 223 patients who received staging laparotomy and were diagnosed with stage IIC–IV serous EOC. Cox regression analysis was used to determine the most significant prognostic factor among the following variables: serum CA125 before surgery and after the first, second, and sixth cycles of chemotherapy; the nadir CA125 value; the relative percentage change in CA125 levels after the first and second cycles of chemotherapy compared to baseline CA125; CA125 half-life; time to nadir; and time to normalization of the CA125 level.

Results

The CA125 level after the first chemotherapy cycle was the most significant independent prognostic factor for overall survival (OS). Time to normalization (p=0.028) and relative percentage change between CA125 levels at baseline and after the first chemotherapy cycle (p=0.021) were additional independent prognostic factors in terms of OS. The CA125 level after the first chemotherapy cycle (p=0.001) and time to normalization (p<0.001) were identified as independent prognostic factors for progression free survival (PFS).

Conclusion

Among well-established CA125-related prognostic factors, serum CA125 levels after the first cycle of chemotherapy and time to normalization were the most significant prognostic factors for both OS and PFS.

INTRODUCTION

Cancer antigen 125 (CA125) is widely used as a biomarker for evaluating disease status and monitoring the efficacy of chemotherapy in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). Parallel changes in CA125 levels and cancer growth have been reported in EOC. As a result, CA125 levels and changes in CA125 levels during treatment have been extensively investigated.
Previous studies demonstrate the prognostic or predictive values of single values (e.g., nadirs, normalizations, or thresholds)123456 or kinetic parameters on two time points, such as percentage decrease,78 half-life,9101112 or area-under-the curve (AUC).13
The Gynecologic Cancer Intergroup (GCIG) defined CA125 response as a 50% reduction in CA125 levels compared to that of a pre-treatment sample; the response must be confirmed and maintained for at least 28 days.14 However, in a recent clinical trial, an early decline in CA125 levels was not a surrogate marker for the efficacy of pegylated liposomal doxorubicin with carboplatin.15 Lee, et al.8 analysed CA125 reductions in patients enrolled in this trial and reported paradoxical outcomes regarding the prognostic value of the GCIG-defined CA125 response.
Thus, previous outcomes about most useful value of CA125 remain controversial. The limited researches have investigated the most reliable and significant method for anticipating survival outcomes among the numerous prediction methods that use CA125. Therefore, the optimal method for predicting patient prognosis remains unknown.
The objective of this study was to identify the most powerful CA125-related significant prognostic factors for patients with EOC. We compared known CA125-related prognostic factors and provided cut-off values that differentiated patients into subgroups of favorable and poor survival outcomes.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Patient populations

Patients who underwent staging laparotomy at the Severance and Gangnam Severance Hospital between March 2004 and March 2013 were included in this study. Inclusion criteria were as follows: 1) serous histological type ovarian cancer; 2) advanced International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage IIC–IV; 3) more than six cycles of taxane+platin-um-based first-line chemotherapy after primary debulking surgery; 4) serially measured CA125 values; and 5) clinical and radiological assessment during follow-up or recurrences. Finally, the study included 223 patients. Elevated CA125 levels are found in >90% of patients with advanced-stage disease, but in only 50% of patients with stage I disease.16 Normal serum CA125 levels are occasionally found in mucinous or endometrioid ovarian cancers, whereas elevated CA125 levels are most frequently observed in serous cancer.17 In this study, advanced stage patients with serous EOC were included to ensure a homogeneous study population. Patients with borderline malignancies treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy and patients who did not receive staging laparotomy at Severance or Gangnam Severance Hospitals were excluded.
All patients received standard staging and debulking surgeries from gynecologic oncological specialists based on FIGO recommendations.18 The first cycle of a taxane plus platinum-based chemotherapy regimen was started an average of 17±10 days after surgery. Six to ten courses of postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (POAC) were administered at approximately three-week intervals.
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Severance Hospital and Gangnam Severance Hospital. Some sera for CA125 assay were provided by Korea Gynecologic Cancer Bank through Bio & Medical Technology Development Program of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Korea.

Clinicopathological characteristics

The following clinicopathological data were obtained from medical records: age, FIGO stage, histological type and grade, pathological result, type of primary treatment (type of surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy), surgical findings (mass size, ascites volume, residual mass size), CA125 level, surgery date, chemotherapy cycle and date, recurrence date, date of last visit, and date of death.
Histologic slides were reviewed by gynecologic pathologists, and histologic types were identified according to World Health Organization (WHO) criteria.19 The histologic grades of well-differentiated, moderately differentiated, and poorly differentiated tumours were classified as grades 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
Operative mass size was classified as either <5 cm or ≥5 cm, and ascites volume was classified as either <500 or ≥500 mL. A residual mass <1 cm after primary surgery was defined as optimal debulking surgery, whereas a residual mass of ≥1 cm was defined as suboptimal debulking surgery.
The treatment start date was defined as the date on which surgical staging was performed. The date of the last visit was defined as the date of the last recorded visit for the patient to either the gynaecology department or any other department. The recurrence date was defined as the date on which newly developed lesions were confirmed by computed tomography (CT), positron emission tomography (PET)-CT, or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) based on elevated CA125 levels or clinical exams.
Overall survival (OS) and progression free survival (PFS) rates were calculated from the date of the first treatment to the date of death (last visit for surviving patients) and from the date of the first treatment to the date of recurrence (last visit in the absence of recurrence), respectively.

CA125 assay

Pre-operative serum CA125 levels were measured within two weeks of the first surgery and approximately three weeks after each chemotherapy cycle, which was 1–3 days before the beginning of the subsequent chemotherapy cycle. CA125 immunoassays were performed using a Beckman DXI (Beckman Coulter, Inc., Brea, CA, USA) at Severance Hospital and a Modular Analytics E170 (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN, USA) at Gangnam Severance Hospital according to manufacturer recommendations. All assays were performed in duplicate, and the reference range for normal CA125 levels was defined as ≤35 U/mL.

CA125 kinetics

The CA125 nadir was defined as the absolute lowest CA125 value after the start of chemotherapy. The time to nadir was defined as the duration from the date of the first treatment to the date of the minimum value.
CA125 half-life (T1/2) was calculated based on mono-compartment models and exponential regression in accordance with earlier studies.202122 For the regression line calculation, at least three serial and aligned ln CA125 concentrations were required from the first six blood samples.
Half-life=ln 2/s,
in which was the slope of the regression curve that reflected the effects of surgery and chemotherapy.
S=ln C1-ln C2/t2-t1=ln C1/C2/t2-t1.
Therefore, half-life=ln 2×(t2-t1)/ln C1/C2.
C1 was the CA125 value before the first treatment, and C2 was the value at which CA125 decreased to <35 U/mL for the first time. If the CA125 level never decreased to <35 U/mL within three months of starting chemotherapy, the lowest value during that period was selected. The times (in days) for C1 and C2 were given as t1 and t2, respectively.

Statistical analysis

Univariate and multivariate Cox model analyses were used to investigate the effects of each clinicopathological prognostic factor on OS and PFS. For the statistical analysis of CA125-related prognostic factors, univariate Cox regression analysis was first performed with each variable and statistically significant variables were selected. Multivariate Cox regression analysis using stepwise selection was performed, and the most significant indicator of OS and PFS was then determined. Two methods were utilized for determining optimal cut-off values of each variable. First, the cut-off values that showed statistically significant outcomes regarding OS and PFS in earlier studies were used for the variables of pre-operative CA125, CA125 levels after the first and second chemotherapy cycles, time to normalization, and relative percentage change in CA125.4102023 Second, for the variables of nadir, time to nadir, CA125 half-life, and CA125 levels after the sixth chemotherapy cycle, the median was used to determine the cut-off value, because it was useful for dividing the group into two parts. Receiver operating characteristic analysis revealed a low AUC without significance when death or recurrence was selected as an event. Consequently, the cut-off values were as follows: pre-operative CA125 levels, 500 U/mL; CA125 levels after the first and second chemotherapy cycles, 35 U/mL; CA125 levels after the sixth chemotherapy cycle, 9 U/mL; CA125 levels at nadir, 8 U/mL; time to nadir, 160 days; time to normalization, third cycle; CA125 half-life, three days; and CA125 relative percentage change, 71%.
Statistical analyses were performed with the software package IBM SPSS Version 20.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). For all tests, all p values were two-sided, and p<0.05 was considered statistically significant.

RESULTS

Patient demographics

Two hundred and twenty-three patients who met the inclusion criteria were included in this study. Patient characteristics and the results of survival analysis regarding the clinicopathological variables are shown in Table 1. The median patient age was 53 years (range, 25–81 years). Most (75.8%) patients had stage IIIC cancer; 80 patients (35.9%) were grade 2, and 107 patients (48.0%) were grade 3 at the time of diagnosis. One hundred and sixty-six patients (74.4%) received optimal debulking surgery, and 45 patients (20.2%) had residual tumours >1 cm. One hundred and seventy-eight patients (79.8%) received six cycles of taxane+platinum-based POAC, and 45 patients (20.2%) received seven to ten cycles. Univariate analysis showed that stage, largest diameter of residual tumour, ascites volume, and number of POAC cycles were prognostic factors for OS. Multivariate analysis showed that stage, ascites volume, and number of POAC cycles were prognostic factors for OS.

Distribution of CA125-related parameters

In the present study, the median pre-operative CA125 value in patients with stage IIC–IV serous ovarian cancer was 787.8 U/mL (range, 13.0–12001.0 U/mL), and CA125 median values after the first, second, and sixth chemotherapy cycles were 43.4 (range, 6.6–2677.2), 17.1 (range, 5.1–3954.5), and 8.8 (range, 2.2–9845.5) U/mL, respectively. The median CA125 nadir level was 7.9 U/mL (range, 2.0–2677.2 U/mL), median time to nadir was 165.0 days (range, 37.0–929.0 days), and median CA125 half-life was 3.1 days (range, 1.5–188.4 days). The median relative percentage change in CA125 compared to that at baseline after the first and second chemotherapy cycles were 91.7% and 96.8%, respectively.

Prognostic impact of CA125-related variables

Survival analyses were performed for the following 10 criteria: 1) pre-operative CA125 level; CA125 levels after the 2) first, 3) second, and 4) sixth chemotherapy cycles; 5) nadir; 6) time to nadir; 7) time to normalization; 8) half-life; and the relative percentage change from baseline to the 9) first and 10) second cycles of chemotherapy.
Each variable was divided into two groups based on the previously mentioned method.
Univariate Cox regression showed that seven variables [pre-operative CA125 level, CA125 levels after the first, second, and sixth chemotherapy cycles, nadir, time to normalization, and relative percentage change (baseline to after first chemotherapy cycle)] were significant prognostic factors for OS; six variables [pre-operative CA125 level, CA125 levels after the first and second chemotherapy cycles, time to normalization, half-life, relative percentage change (baseline to after first chemotherapy cycle)] were significant prognostic factors for PFS (Table 2).
To determine the most significant prognostic factors for OS and PFS, multivariate Cox regression, using stepwise regression techniques was performed with the variables that showed significant outcomes in univariate analysis. As a result, the CA125 level measured after the first chemotherapy cycle, time to CA125 normalization, and relative percentage change of CA125, compared to that at baseline after the first chemotherapy cycle, were sequentially selected for OS; time to CA125 normalization followed by CA125 level after the first chemotherapy cycle was selected for PFS (Table 3).
The CA125 level measured after the first chemotherapy cycle was selected as the most significant factor for OS and the second most significant prognostic factor for PFS, and was divided into two groups by the cut-off value of 35 U/mL. Kaplan-Meier analysis was then performed. The five-year OS rates were 87.4% and 56.9% for patients with CA125 levels ≤35 U/mL and >35 U/mL, respectively, after the first chemotherapy cycle (p<0.001). The prognosis for two-year PFS manifested differences of 69.7% and 36.7%, respectively (p<0.001) (Fig. 1). Kaplan-Meier analysis of the time to normalization, which was selected as the second highest factor for OS and the most significant prognostic factor for PFS, determined that patients who did not show normal CA125 values within three chemotherapy cycles had significantly unfavourable OS and PFS (five-year OS: 50.1%, two-year PFS: 22.2%) compared to that in patients who demonstrated normal CA125 values (five-year OS: 73.4%, two-year PFS: 55.0%) (p<0.001) (Fig. 2).

DISCUSSION

The main finding of this study was that serum CA125 levels ≤35 U/mL after the first cycle of chemotherapy and normalization of CA125 levels within three cycles of chemotherapy were the most significant prognostic factors for both OS and PFS.
Until now, an alternative to CA125 has not been identified for screening and monitoring EOC or for use as a prognostic indicator. Therefore, many studies continue to investigate the relationship between CA125 and ovarian cancer prognosis.
The predictive and prognostic values of baseline CA125 concentrations, which are measured before initiating treatment, have been previously described.242526 However, CA125 has limited applications in all stages of EOC, as 7.6% of patients with advanced EOC show normal CA125 levels (< or =35 U/mL).24 Another major limitation of this simple approach is that baseline values measured before the initiation of treatment do not integrate the effect of treatment on subsequent CA125 titers.
CA125 normalization at the end of six chemotherapy cycles was reported as a predictive factor in Gynecology Oncology Group trials5 and during the third cycle in two other studies.427 These results are consistent with our main results. Similar conclusions have also been made regarding the value of CA125 normalization after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with advanced ovarian cancer.2829 The nadir has been used to analyse the kinetics of CA125 in ovarian cancer patients,6123031 but the reported thresholds are inconsistent. Furthermore, it should be noted that the predicted level of decrease in CA125 percentages has been reported in metastatic ovarian cancer patients.23323334 In 2004, the GCIC defined a CA125 response to treatment as a 50% reduction in CA125 levels maintained for at least 28 days.7 However, in the CALYPSO trial, an early decline in CA125 was more frequent in the detrimental arm,8 and the reproducibility of the surrogate values for the percentage decrease remains debatable.
The aim of this study was to determine the most significant and reliable prognostic factors for OS and PFS among the known CA125-related prognostic factors and to provide cut-off values that reflect differences in prognosis when subdivided into two groups. To investigate if this trend was similar to previously reported trends, univariate analysis of 10 factors was performed in the patients included in this study. Statistically significant outcomes were obtained for eight factors except for time to nadir and relative percentage change between baseline and after the second chemotherapy cycle.
Because the cut-off CA125 level after the first chemotherapy cycle was 35 U/mL and the time to normalization was the third cycle, two checkpoints should be considered when evaluating the prognosis of patients with advanced ovarian cancer after debulking surgery and POAC. First, the CA125 level after the first chemotherapy cycle (≤35 or >35 U/mL) can primarily classify good prognosis versus poor prognosis. CA125 levels in the normal range after the third chemotherapy cycle may allow clinicians to predict patient prognosis. In contrast to CA125 kinetics, such as relative percentage change, half-life, and time to nadir, the CA125-related prognostic factors confirmed in this study are convenient and can determine whether the CA125 levels after the first and third chemotherapy cycles are less than the normal reference value of 35 U/mL. Therefore, when patients have a poor prognosis according to the two checkpoints, chemotherapy dose, interval, cycle number, and regimen sho-uld be reviewed.
This study had several limitations. First, the retrospective nature of the study and potential selection bias might have affected our results. Second, due to a high percentage of patients without a confirmed pre-chemotherapy CA125 level, pre-chemotherapy CA125 was not included as a variable in this study. However, through multivariate analysis in a multicentre retrospective study with 494 subjects, Riedinger, et al.23 determined that patients with normal baseline CA125 levels or patients who showed a >50% decrease to <35 U/mL before the second chemotherapy cycle had a favourable prognosis. The above authors observed, statistically significant differences in prognosis, confirming that this was the most significant prognostic factor; consistent with our present results.
In conclusion, absolute CA125 levels measured after the first chemotherapy cycle (cut-off value: 35 U/mL) and normalization of CA125 levels up to the third chemotherapy cycle were the most significant prognostic factors for predicting OS and PFS in patients with advanced serous ovarian cancer. Therefore, during first-line chemotherapy, subsets of patients can be predicted to have poor prognosis by routinely measuring CA125 levels. Based on these analyses, treatment plans can be changed to improve patient prognosis. Finally, a reasonable study might randomize patients with EOC whose serum CA125 levels fail to normalize after the initial three chemotherapy cycles to either continued platinum or taxane chemotherapy or to a 'novel' antineoplastic regimen whose composition remains to be determined.

Figures and Tables

Fig. 1

Kaplan-Meier survival plot for overall survival and progression free survival according to CA125 after 1st cycle of chemotherapy. CA125, cancer antigen 125.

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Fig. 2

Kaplan-Meier survival plot for overall survival and progression free survival according to the timing of normalization of CA125. CA125, cancer antigen 125.

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Table 1

Univariate and Multivariate Cox Model Analyses of Clinicopathological Characteristics for Overall Survival (n=223)

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Variables No. (%) Univariate Multivariate
p value HR (95% CI) p value HR (95% CI)
Age
 ≤50 yrs 89 (39.9) 1 1
 >50 yrs 134 (60.1) 0.335 1.28 (0.78-2.10) 0.272 1.40 (0.77-2.52)
FIGO stage
 IIC or III 182 (81.6) 1 1
 IV 41 (18.4) <0.001 2.81 (1.67-4.75) 0.049 1.88 (1.0-3.51)
Grade
 1 15 (6.7) 1 1
 2 80 (35.9) 0.086 5.79 (0.78-42.85) 0.223 3.52 (0.47-26.73)
 3 107 (48.0) 0.086 5.74 (0.78-42.08) 0.235 3.38 (0.45-25.34)
Residual tumour
 <1 cm 166 (74.4) 1 1
 ≥1 cm 45 (20.2) 0.026 1.90 (1.08-3.34) 0.367 1.36 (0.70-2.65)
Ascites
 <500 mL 106 (47.5) 1 1
 ≥500 mL 115 (51.6) <0.001 3.05 (1.79-5.21) 0.015 2.19 (1.17-4.10)
Chemotherapy cycles
 6 178 (79.8) 1 1
 >6 45 (20.2) 0.049 1.70 (1.00-2.87) 0.033 1.98 (1.06-3.71)

FIGO, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio.

Table 2

Univariate Analysis of CA125-related Prognostic Factors for Overall Survival and Progression Free Survival

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Prognostic factor Categories OS PFS
p value HR (95% CI) p value HR (95% CI)
Pre-operative CA125 ≤500 u/mL 1 1
>500 u/mL 0.011 1.94 (1.17-3.24) 0.002 1.68 (1.22-2.31)
After 1st CTx ≤35 u/mL 1 1
>35 u/mL <0.001 4.46 (2.49-7.99) <0.001 2.30 (1.66-3.19)
After 2nd CTx ≤35 u/mL 1 1
>35 u/mL <0.001 2.85 (1.74-4.66) <0.001 2.65 (1.88-3.73)
After 6th CTx ≤9 u/mL 1 1
>9 u/mL 0.008 1.93 (1.19-3.15) 0.47 1.38 (1.00-1.88)
Nadir ≤8 u/mL 1 1
>8 u/mL 0.028 1.69 (1.06-2.68) 0.53 1.35 (1.00-1.84)
Time to nadir ≤160 days 1 1
>160 days 0.177 0.73 (0.46-1.16) 0.068 0.75 (0.55-1.02)
Time to normalization ≤3rd cycle 1 1
>3rd cycle <0.001 3.57 (2.00-6.38) <0.001 3.84 (2.50-5.88)
CA125 half-life ≤3 days 1 1
>3 days 0.129 0.70 (0.44-1.11) 0.021 0.70 (0.51-0.95)
Relative change (base-after 1st CTx) >71% 1 1
≤71% 0.001 0.42 (0.25-0.71) 0.031 0.66 (0.45-0.96)
Relative change (base-after 2nd CTx) >71% 1 1
≤71% 0.700 0.86 (0.39-1.87) 0.126 1.61 (0.88-2.98)

OS, overall survival; PFS, progression free survival; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; CTx, chemotherapy; CA125, cancer antigen 125.

Table 3

Multivariate Analysis of CA125-Related Prognostic Factors for Overall Survival and Progression Free Survival

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Prognostic factor Categories OS PFS
p value HR (95% CI) p value HR (95% CI)
After 1st CTx ≤35 u/mL 1 1
>35 u/mL <0.001 3.68 (1.96-6.91) 0.001 1.82 (1.28-2.60)
Time to normalization ≤3rd cycle 1 1
>3rd cycle 0.028 2.00 (1.08-3.71) <0.001 2.91 (1.85-4.59)
Relative change (base-after 1st CTx) ≤71% 1 -
>71% 0.021 0.52 (0.29-0.90)
Pre-operative CA125 ≤500 u/mL - -
>500 u/mL
After 2nd CTx ≤35 u/mL - -
>35 u/mL
After 6th CTx ≤9 u/mL - -
>9 u/mL
Nadir ≤8 u/mL - -
>8 u/mL
CA125 half-life ≤3 days - -
>3 days

OS, overall survival; PFS, progression free survival; CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; CTx, chemotherapy; CA125, cancer antigen 125.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Jae Hyon Park (Undergraduate student, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea) for proofreading the English in this manuscript.

Notes

The authors have no financial conflicts of interest.

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