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The value of human epididymis protein 4 (HE4) as a serum tumor marker for accurate bone metastases finding by whole-body bone scintigraphy in lung cancer patients
Author(s) -
Jaroslav Weissensteiner,
Eva Babušíková
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
neoplasma
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.628
H-Index - 50
eISSN - 1338-4317
pISSN - 0028-2685
DOI - 10.4149/neo_2018_181212n961
Subject(s) - medicine , bone scintigraphy , lung cancer , bone metastasis , scintigraphy , epididymis , lung , cancer , metastasis , pathology , oncology , radiology , sperm , andrology
The aim of our study was to correlate the serum concentration of human epididymis protein 4 (HE4) in lung cancer patients with the bone metastases detected by whole-body bone scintigraphy. The serum concentrations of HE4 were determined by electrochemiluminescence immunoassay method in 60 patients with lung cancer and in 10 persons without malignant disease (control group). All participants were examined by whole-body bone scintigraphy with hybrid gamma camera of type BrightView XCT. We found bone metastases in 25.0% of patients by whole-body bone scintigraphy and probable bone metastases in 18.3% of patients. We did not observe bone metastases in 56.7% of patients and in nobody from control group. We observed that 73.33% patients with bone metastases had more than 3 bone metastasis deposits. Patients had significantly increased concentration of HE4 (p < 0.0001). All three subgroups of patients (bone metastases, probable bone metastases, no evidence of bone metastases) had significantly increased concentration of HE4 compared to controls. The highest concentration of HE4 had 9 patients with small-cell lung cancer of whose 4 patients had bone metastases, 4 patients had probable bone metastases and one patient was with no evidence of bone metastases. We found that HE4 has a discriminatory ability to differentiate groups of patients and healthy controls, as well as within scaffold scintigraphy in patients with lung cancer (p = 0.0002). The serum concentration of human epididymis protein 4 was significantly increased in patients with lung cancer in comparison with persons of control group. A quarter of lung cancer patients had identified bone metastases by whole-body bone scintigraphy and approximately 20% of patients had probable bone metastases. The increasing serum concentrations of human epididymis protein 4 can have importance in the diagnosis of bone metastases in patients with lung cancer, in particular in small-cell lung cancer.

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