Diagnostic and prognostic value of TPA in breast cancer.

1985 
: Serum tissue polypeptide antigen (TPA) was measured by RIA in 151 female patients who had had mastectomies for breast cancer, in 30 patients with benign breast disease, and in 30 normal controls. The marker was elevated in 52 neoplastic patients (25 with metastases) and in six cases of benign breast disease. At the time of our observation 15 cancer patients were at stage I, 53 at stage II, 48 at stage III, and 35 at stage IV, the prevalence of high TPA values significantly correlated with staging gradually increasing from 0 to 71.4% from stage I to IV. In patients with breast cancer TPA was significantly higher in the subgroup with metastatic disease compared to patients with apparently inactive disease. Nineteen patients without (group A) and 35 with metastases (group B) were monitored with serial measurements of TPA for 8-24 months. Group B was receiving either hormone or chemotherapy. In 10 group A patients TPA was either higher or rose 1-7 months prior to the clinical detection of metastases. Twenty-two patients from Group B had disease progression: In 20 of them TPA rose further. The remaining 13 patients had an apparent disease regression, and in 11 instances TPA either fell or remained normal. Thus TPA can detect early recurrence of breast cancer before clinical and instrumental methods; moreover, it might prove important in evaluating tumor response to treatment and in follow-up of patients with metastatic disease. Finally, serial measurements of TPA could identify previous false-positive results, thus improving the specificity of the test.
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