PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)
Circulating antinuclear antibodies in patients with pelvic masses are associated with malignancy and decreased survival.
Abstract
BackgroundCirculating autoantibodies occur more frequently in cancer patients than in patients without cancer.Methods and findingsWe examined sera from patients referred for pelvic mass symptoms to a tertiary university clinic. A total of 127 were diagnosed with epithelial ovarian cancer while 386 had a benign condition. A screen for IgG anti-nuclear antibodies (ANA) by indirect immunofluorescence on HEp-2 cells confirmed a highly significant overrepresentation of ANA in the cancer group where 40% had detectable (i.e., a titer ≥160) ANA compared with less than 12% in the benign group. The overrepresentation of ANA in the cancer group persisted (pConclusionsCirculating antibodies are a promising source for new biomarkers in cancer. Characterization of epitope specificities and measurements of consecutive samples will be important for further elucidating the role of ANA in evaluating ovarian cancer patients.