Abstract: | ![]() One-hundred and seventy-four consecutive patients who underwent curative resection for gastric and colorec-tal cancer between 1983 and 1985 were studied prospectively to evaluate the roles of sequential carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA), tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA) and Ca 19–9 determinations and independent clinical examinations, in the early diagnosis of resectable recurrences. Sixty-six recurrences (33 from gastric and 33 from colorectal cancer) were detected between 6 and 42 months after primary surgery. In gastric cancer CEA, TPA and Ca 19–9 showed a sensitivity of 64%. 73% and 60% respectively and a specificity of 67%. 65% and 54% respectively. Nine patients (27%) underwent surgical treatment for recurrent disease, and four of these (44.4%) had resectable recurrence, for a total resectability rate of 12%. Of these four patients, three are still living after 12, 36 and 44 months respectively from re-operation without evidence of neoplastic disease. In one of these patients, re-operation was performed on the basis of the elevation of the three markers, without any other clinical sign of disease. This patient had a resectable solitary hepatic recurrence. In colorectal cancer, CEA, TPA and Ca 19–9 showed a sensitivity of 73%. 73% and 49% respectively, and a specificity of 77%. 87% and 97% respectively. Fourteen patients (42.4%) underwent surgical treatment for recurrent disease and eight of these (57%) showed resectable recurrence, for a total resectability rate of 24.2%. Six patients are still living after 9, 16, 21, 31, 41 and 53 months respectively from re-operation without evidence of neoplastic disease. In four cases the rises of the three marker levels was the one sign of recurrent disease. In one case, the operation revealed a peritoneal carcinomatosis, and in the other three cases resectable hepatic metastases were found. All these three patients are still living and disease-free. In 46 cases, the rise in the value of CEA (35 cases) and/or TPA (34 cases) and/or Ca 19–9 (28 cases) was the first sign of recurrence. and the diagnosis was established later by clinical methods. In this group. the median time for diagnosis of recurrence, based on increase in initial markers comparison with routine clinical and instrumental follow-up (lead time), was 3 months for liver metastases and 4 months for disseminated metastases. The results of our study indicate that a follow-up programme based on CEA, TPA and Ca 19–9 assays is related to an early diagnosis and good resectability rate for recurrent gastric disease. |