Opinions needed PLEASE!....CEA rising...scans clear...chemo or not?

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Comments

  • smokeyjoe
    smokeyjoe Member Posts: 1,425 Member

    SmoJoe
    No node involvemet now...or ever. When tested at DX all were neg.

    Jennie

    When you go for maintenance
    When you go for maintenance chemo. what is it, do you have to sit for an infusion, or is it pills??
  • tanstaafl
    tanstaafl Member Posts: 1,313 Member

    Hey Kathleen!...
    Great to hear Dicks colonoscopy came out good. Thats encouraging news. The last 2 PET/CT's I have had they scanned head to toe. I have never had that done previosly. It was always chin toid thigh. It felt good to see what was going on in my brain. I always wonder about that area...of course I have wondered about that area my whole life..LOL!!! You take care! Tell **** I said "Hey"

    Jennie

    more resolution
    Our radiologist said ears to thigh has higher CT resolution for 99.9+% of where CRC mets show up.
  • pete43lost_at_sea
    pete43lost_at_sea Member Posts: 3,900 Member
    John23 said:

    Jennie....

    Almost everything I found does not specify the "numbers",
    but what I did find disturbs even me.....

    The "good news", is that the general consensus is to use
    CEA as a tool, not a decision maker. It appears that most
    oncologists will not start chemo if it's based only on a high
    CEA count; it's just not accurate enough, and it doesn't
    indicate where the cancer is or what organ it is related to.

    If the CEA count is high, and they administer chemo for what they
    think is colon cancer, when it's actually lung cancer metastases,
    the chemo likely won't work; So why do it?

    The bottom line? CEA is a generic; a tumor marker that will not
    provide much of an answer on it's own. When it's used along
    with other tests, it can be of value.

    The following link explains it fairly well, using words that even
    I can understand: Tumor Markers in Colon Cancer

    DISCLAIMER:

    For anyone that does not desire to read anything at all that
    might be construed in any way as being "Negative Karma",
    don't click on the link. You have been forewarned.


    A safer link:
    Google: CEA is not a screening test for cancer

    BUT.... There may be something undesirable to some readers there also.

    (Grief.... this is like trying to avoid porn on the web)

    Be Well !

    John

    ha ha ha ha
    I love the colours and about the corn on the web, can you send me some links.
    I can only find medical research papers.
  • idlehunters
    idlehunters Member Posts: 1,787 Member
    smokeyjoe said:

    When you go for maintenance
    When you go for maintenance chemo. what is it, do you have to sit for an infusion, or is it pills??

    Maintenance...
    For maintenance I get a 30 min drip of Leuco and 5FU Bolus
  • maxsyin
    maxsyin Member Posts: 1
    rising cea levels!
    hi!
    your doc is pretty much right in having wait and watch policy! u cant treat what u cant see!
    mine is also a very challenging case.my cea levels have sharply risen in past 3 months from 12 to 833! (checked from 2 diffrent reputable labs!)my mri and colonoscopy are just fine! my doc has asked me for wait and watch policy.....
  • BettyJoM
    BettyJoM Member Posts: 82
    John23 said:

    Hey, remember this?

    I posted this way back in September 16, 2010 - 10:55pm



    ----------------------------------------

    To: Jennie -


    Whew.

    Re:
    "my peeps on the Cancer Board say that their docs tell them that
    dying tumors...dying cancer cells..can cause a rise in CEA.
    He told me that is absolutely NOT true. He siad when cancer cells
    are dying they have less or no CEA in them at all... They are DEAD.
    can't measure the antigen in something dead. "


    Oh? Ok.:

    "Chemotherapy and radiation therapy can cause a temporary rise in
    CEA due to the death of tumor cells and release of CEA into the
    blood stream. Benign disease does not usually cause an increase
    above 10 ng/ml."
    From: http://www.medicinenet.com/carcinoembryonic_antigen/article.htm

    ---------------

    "The data presented in this study support both lines of
    thought concerning CEA production; however, these results
    strongly uphold the theory of CEA release by dying cells."
    From: http://etd.lib.ttu.edu/

    -------------

    "recent observations of CEA upregulation in CRC cell lines by cellular stressors such as
    hypoxia9 or exposure to cytotoxic drugs such as 5-fluorouracil.10,11 Moreover, it is plausible
    that apoptotic release of CEA from dying cells could trigger transient increases"
    From: http://cigjournals.metapress.com/index/8278xq0v077w2166.pdf

    -------------

    "One possible explanation for the rise in marker levels among
    patients with regressing tumor is that the dying cells may
    release large amounts of marker into the blood."
    From: http://www.faqs.org/abstracts/Health/Tumor-marker

    ------------

    "Colorectal cancer patients whose CEA blood tests rise at the
    beginning of chemotherapy and then fall (CEA flare) do better
    than patients with a consistently rising CEA. CEA flares don’t
    necessarily predict worsening cancer.

    Compared to patients with consistently rising carcinoembryonic
    antigen (CEA), patients who had a CEA flare had more tumor
    shrinkage, longer time before their cancer got worse, and longer
    survival time."
    From: http://fightcolorectalcancer.org/research_news/2009/

    ------------

    "If we had followed this ASCO guideline of measurement of CEA
    level every second month, one of the surge patients would have
    been incorrectly interpreted as having experienced treatment
    failure, and therapy would have stopped.
    The patient would have
    been incorrectly removed from the treatment, giving her a time to
    progression of 11.2 months and 27.3-month survival. To avoid
    inappropriate therapy changes based on clinical misinterpretation
    of a CEA surge as an impending disease progression, we suggest
    that future ASCO guidelines should mention the possibility of CEA
    surge. Furthermore, we suggest that no therapy changes should be
    based on CEA levels alone at all during the first 6 months of therapy.

    An initial rise in CEA level during effective chemotherapy in
    colorectal cancer patients may not always indicate progression of
    disease but may be a transient CEA surge in patients responding
    to chemotherapy.
    In monitoring tumor responses and in future
    guidelines for the use of tumor markers, the possibility of a
    surge phenomenon should be taken into account. This will
    especially be important if a new, more effective treatment with
    high response rates or rapid tumor destruction is introduced. "
    From: http://jco.ascopubs.org/content/21/23/4466.full

    -------------

    Those last paragraphs (note bolded text) say more than enough regarding
    CEA and mistakes that can be made with treatment scheduling.

    And Re:

    "He told me that is absolutely NOT true. He siad when cancer cells
    are dying they have less or no CEA in them at all... They are DEAD.
    can't measure the antigen in something dead. "

    Maybe you oughta' shop around for a new Onco..... You deserve
    better care than an idle assumption.

    (I wanted to re-phrase that last statement....... My extreme anger at
    physicians that are too busy making money to do research, was showing).

    John

    ---------------------------------


    There. How was that?

    It's like Deja'Vu all over again.

    We always manage to worry about everything after a diagnosis
    of cancer; I don't think it ever stops. (not for me, anyway)

    Think good things!

    John

    CEA advice
    I finished chemotherapy about 6 weeks ago. My Cea level in sept, after my surgery was 3, recently, about 3 weeks ago my level was something like 7.8. I have no idea what was in between. My oncologist did a pet scan which showed nothing but he wants me to have a colonoscopy, scheduled for next week.
    I havent gone to any of the links you provided but after finishing treatment and the CEA rises, it is an indication to look for cancer, am I right?