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Rising CEA after colon cancer treatment |
Dear OncoLink "Ask The Experts," Timothy C. Hoops, MD, Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Gastroenterology Division at the University of Pennsylvania and Director of Gastroenterology at Penn Medicine at Radnor, responds: CEA is a glycoprotein that is found on the surface of many cells. It is present in colon cells, and many colon cancers have an elevated expression of this protein that somehow is shed and found in the blood where it can be measured. It is also elevated in a number of benign conditions. The fact that your mother's colon cancer has been absent for 15 years makes it unlikely that this is a recurrence although a new cancer would be possible. Examination of the abdomen and pelvis to look for recurrence is the usual procedure and the negative CT along with a colonoscopy showing no abnormalities supports the above statement and effectively rule out a new cancer. CEA is also expressed by other cancers, including other GI organs like the stomach, as well as non-GI cancers like lung. One might look at there sites to make certain that nothing else is found. Otherwise, the option is to watch the CEA levels to see which way they move and reinvestigate if the levels continue to increase. |
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