Abstract: | To evaluate the diagnostic usefulness of simultaneous determinations of 4 tumor markers (carcinoembryonic antigen, calcitonin, creatinine kinase-BB, and DNA), we studied 31 patients with lung cancer, 22 with benign lung disease, and 15 normal volunteers as control subjects. The measurements were made by radioimmunoassay in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) and in serum obtained on the same day. The results showed that in serum, only CEA levels were significantly higher in malignancy; in lavage fluids, all 4 markers were abnormally high in cancer patients when compared with control subjects (p less than 0.05); there was no correlation between the levels in lavage and those in the bloodstream. When the mean levels in lavage of the normal control subjects were designated as the limits for a positive test, significant association was found between malignancy and abnormally elevated marker concentration (p less than 0.01). The particular combination of CEA-BAL greater than 35 ng/mg, CEA-serum greater than 4 ng/ml, and calcitonin-BAL greater than 120 pg/mg taken together with the results of bronchoscopy (histologic and cytologic) showed the highest discriminating power between malignant and benign lung disease. The sensitivity of the bronchoscopy procedure increased from 50 to 89%, with at least 2 positive markers, and had a specificity of 71%. When both bronchoscopy and all 3 markers were negative, the results showed a negative predictive value of 100%. We conclude that tumor marker levels in lavage are a useful aid in the diagnosis of malignancy in patients undergoing bronchoscopy. |