Purpose: Evaluation of serum ICAM-1 (soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1) and M-CSF (macrophage colony-stimulating growth factor) determinations for monitoring patients with non-serous ovarian cancers.
Methods: ELISA assay of sICAM-1 (cut-off 235 ng/ml) and M-CSF (cut-off 450 pg/ml) in 190 blood samples from 34 patients.
Results: In pre-treatment sera (n=17), sICAM-1 was over the cut-off in 12/17 (70.6%), M-CSF in 14/17 (82.4%) and CA 125 in 12/16 (75%). sICAM-1 was related only to age at diagnosis (p=0.0008). M-CSF was positively correlated to FIGO stage (p=0.04) CA 125 was elevated in 90.9% of adenocarcinomas (p=0.033 vs other). None of the 3 biological markers were related to other clinico-pathological criteria. Among disease-free patients, higher median concentrations of sICAM-1 and M-CSF were recorded under adjuvant treatment than without (p=0.014, and p=0.08, respectively). After relapse, the highest levels of sICAM-1, M-CSF and CA 125 were observed in progressive disease (46/53, 86.8% (p=0.014), 51/53 96.2% (p=0.008) and 46/52 88.5% (p>0.05), respectively).
Conclusion: In non-serous ovarian cancers, sICAM-1 although elevated in most cases, is not useful for monitoring. Serum M-CSF is a valuable marker when ovarian tumours do not express CA 125.