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Circulating IgG Fragments for Gastric Cancer and Esophageal Cancer.

Eugene I GoufmanNataliia B TikhonovaAndrey P AleksankinKarina B GershkovichAlexander A StepanovIrina I StepanovaLiudmila M MikhalevaNatalya V NiziaevaOlga Vladimirovna KovalevaAlexander A AlferovYury B KuzminNikolay E Kushlinskii
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Blood serum of patients with gastric ( n = 68) and esophageal ( n = 43) cancer was assessed for proteolytic fragments of IgG. Serum samples of 20 healthy donors were used as a control. We analyzed indicators of hemostasis (prothrombin time, fibrinogen, plasminogen activity, a2-antiplasmin activity, protein C activity) in blood plasma and the level of total IgG in the blood serum. The median IgG-LysK of healthy donors was lower than in esophageal cancer and in patients with gastric cancer. ROC-analysis showed high sensitivity (91%) and specificity (85%) in the group with esophageal cancer but 68% and 85%, respectively, in patients with gastric cancer. Analysis of false negatives IgG-LysK in cancer patients showed that most patients had an advanced stage of cancer accompanied by metastases. Total IgG in the plasma of patients with false-negative IgG-LysK values was 30% lower than in samples with positive values, while the level of a2-antiplasmin was increased and the prothrombin time was shorter. These changes in blood homeostasis may be the reason for an increase in the proportion of false-negative values of the IgG-LysK coefficient. Circulatory IgG-LysK levels increase in the early stages of such cancers as gastric and esophageal cancers. Thus, when used in a panel with other more specific markers for these pathologies, this indicator can significantly increase the early detection of cancer.
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