Enthusiasm for the use of neoadjuvant therapy for patients with potentially resectable pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PC) has grown as clinicians have increasingly recognized “resectable” PC as a systemic disease. Neoadjuvant treatment sequencing allows for early treatment of the extrapancreatic micrometastases present in the majority of patients with localized PC and improves the selection of patients for surgery by limiting resection to those with stable or responding disease—an important consideration for an operation with a defined mortality and significant morbidity.1 Although no randomized trial has demonstrated the superiority of preoperative over postoperative adjuvant therapy, results from single-institution series, multi-institutional trials, and population-based analyses encourage further study of novel treatment sequencing in patients with stage I and II PC.26

In addition to neoadjuvant treatment sequencing, another tool to more accurately select patients for surgery might be a serum tumor marker. Carbohydrate antigen 19-9 (CA 19-9) has long been accepted as a measure of PC tumor burden, and as such it has been utilized as a prognostic marker for patients with all stages of disease.7 Among patients with resectable PC, preoperative levels correlate with tumor resectability and postoperative survival, and postoperative levels predict survival duration in patients treated with adjuvant therapies.812 For patients with advanced PC, pretreatment CA 19-9 has been reported to be prognostic and the change in serum levels over the course of treatment has been used as an index of treatment response.13,14

Serum CA 19-9 is a useful tumor marker in certain clinical scenarios, but its added prognostic value beyond radiographic and clinical staging for patients with resectable PC is unclear. Moreover, although a few studies have examined CA 19-9 levels of patients who had been treated with chemotherapy or chemoradiation prior to surgery, only one small study has evaluated serial CA 19-9 levels of patients with resectable PC treated with a multidisciplinary program of neoadjuvant therapy and planned resection.1518 To clearly define the role of CA 19-9 in this context, we analyzed patients with potentially resectable PC of the pancreatic head or uncinate process treated on two recently reported phase II trials of neoadjuvant chemoradiation.2,3

Patients and Methods

Between 1998 and 2006, 176 patients were enrolled on two neoadjuvant trials. In the first trial (Gem-XRT), induction therapy consisted of seven, weekly intravenous infusions of gemcitabine (400 mg/m2) and concomitant radiation therapy (30 Gy in ten fractions).2 Patients on the second trial (Gem-Cis-XRT) received four doses of gemcitabine (750 mg/m2) and cisplatin (30 mg/m2) followed by gemcitabine-based chemoradiation.3 Of the 176 patients, we excluded 2 from analysis: 1 with an adenocarcinoma of the ampulla of Vater, and 1 with an adenocarcinoma arising within an intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm.

Eligibility requirements of both studies were identical.2,3 Briefly, all patients had a radiographically visible mass in the pancreatic head or uncinate process and pathologically confirmed adenocarcinoma which was staged as potentially resectable on the basis of objective computed tomography (CT) criteria: (1) no evidence of extrapancreatic disease, (2) absence of tumor extension to the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) or celiac axis, and (3) no evidence of occlusion of the superior mesenteric vein (SMV) or SMV–portal vein (PV) confluence.19 When necessary, biliary decompression was accomplished endoscopically. All patients underwent complete restaging evaluation 4–6 weeks following completion of chemoradiation. In the absence of disease progression, patients underwent laparotomy for pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD); the decision to operate was not influenced by CA 19-9. Histopathologic response to preoperative therapy was scored by a gastrointestinal pathologist.20 Follow-up was performed on a standard schedule.

Neither trial protocol mandated measurement of serum CA 19-9 but levels were typically measured both prior to (pretreatment level) and following (restaging level) induction therapy. Serum acquired prior to October 6, 2004 was assayed for CA 19-9 by Quest Diagnostics (Madison, NJ). Subsequent samples were assayed using a similar method at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. Serum CA 19-9 levels obtained in association with total bilirubin ≤1.5 mg/dl were considered evaluable. Levels associated with total bilirubin >1.5 mg/dl were excluded from analysis, as biliary obstruction may lead to an increase in serum levels of CA 19-9.7,21 CA 19-9 may also not be an accurate reflection of disease status in patients who express the Lewisa-b- genotype.22 However, genotyping was not performed prospectively and could not be performed retrospectively, so “nonproducers” could not be distinguished from patients who produce CA 19-9 but presented with values below the assay sensitivity threshold (<8 U/ml and <1 U/ml prior to and after October 6, 2004, respectively). For the purpose of this analysis, below-threshold serum CA 19-9 values were recorded as the threshold value.

Pearson chi-square and Student’s t test were used to compare variables. Overall survival was calculated from date of tissue diagnosis and was estimated by the Kaplan–Meier method. The log-rank test was used to compare survival curves. Receiver-operating characteristics (ROC) curves were constructed by using SAS/STAT 9.1.3 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC) to evaluate the ability of CA 19-9 to predict completion of all therapy including PD. The area under the curve (AUC) was calculated to compare the relative value of each test. Optimal cutoff values for each test were established by identifying the cutoff at which the sensitivity and specificity of the test were simultaneously maximized. SPSS 17.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL) was used for all other statistical analyses. Values of P ≤ 0.05 were considered to be significant for all comparisons.

Results

Median survival of the 174 patients was 20 months [95% confidence interval (CI) 17.0–22.7 months]. Following chemoradiation, 139 (80%) of the 174 patients remained candidates for PD based on the clinical restaging evaluation. Of these, 119 (86%) underwent resection and had a median survival of 32 months (95% CI 25.4–37.6 months). Median survival of all patients (P = 0.08) and resected patients (P = 0.21) did not differ between treatment protocols. Median follow-up of surviving patients was 78 months.

Pretreatment CA 19-9 was assayed in 166 (95%) of 174 patients and was evaluable in 99 (median 145 U/ml, mean 595 ± 1,233 U/ml, range 2–8,614 U/ml); the 67 remaining patients had hyperbilirubinemia which precluded accurate evaluation of CA 19-9 levels. Restaging CA 19-9 was assayed in 133 (76%) of 174 patients and was evaluable in 129 (median 44 U/ml, mean 279 ± 912 U/ml, range 1–6,926 U/ml); the 4 remaining patients had a total bilirubin >1.5 mg/dl and were excluded from analysis. Of the 99 patients with an evaluable pretreatment CA 19-9 level, 82 (83%) had an evaluable restaging CA 19-9 (median 42 U/ml, mean 316 ± 1,078 U/ml, range 1–6,926 U/ml). The demographics, clinical factors, and outcomes of patients with and without evaluable CA 19-9 levels at each time point were similar (Table 1).

Table 1 Demographic profile, clinical factors, and outcomes of 174 patients with resectable PC treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiation

Association of Pretreatment CA 19-9 with PD, Postoperative Recurrence, and Survival

Of 99 patients with an evaluable pretreatment serum CA 19-9 level, 70 (71%) completed all therapy including PD (median 129 U/ml, mean 581 ± 1,364 U/ml, range 2–8,614 U/ml) and 29 patients did not (median 173 U/ml, mean 629 ± 856 U/ml, range 12–3,365 U/ml, P = 0.9). The area under the ROC curve for pretreatment CA 19-9 as a marker of completing all therapy including surgical resection was 0.59 (95% CI 0.47–0.71); the optimal cutoff which simultaneously maximized both the sensitivity (54%) and specificity (55%) of the test was 149 U/ml (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1
figure 1

Receiver-operating characteristics (ROC) curves for pretreatment and restaging serum CA 19-9 levels as predictors of completing all therapy including pancreaticoduodenectomy. The area under the curve (AUC) and optimal cutoff values for pretreatment and restaging CA 19-9 were 0.59 (95% CI 0.47–0.71), 149 U/ml and 0.74 (95% CI 0.64–0.84), 61 U/ml, respectively

Pretreatment CA 19-9 was associated with a low negative predictive value (NPV) for completing all therapy including PD at all cutoff values (Table 2). Among 15 patients without documented recurrence following PD, the highest pretreatment CA 19-9 level was 1,125 U/ml (Fig. 2). In contrast, the positive predictive value (PPV) of pretreatment CA 19-9 for undergoing PD was considerably higher. Patients with a pretreatment CA 19-9 level within the normal range had more favorable survival than those with an elevated pretreatment CA 19-9 (P = 0.02), although significance was not maintained when evaluating only those patients who underwent PD (P = 0.08).

Table 2 Resection rate and overall survival of 99 patients with evaluable pretreatment CA 19-9 levels stratified by cutoff
Fig. 2
figure 2

Pretreatment serum CA 19-9 levels of patients stratified by resection and recurrence status at last follow-up. Of 78 patients with pretreatment CA 19-9 above normal, 52 (67%) underwent resection, of whom 15 (22%) died of another cause or had not recurred at last follow-up. Y-axis scale is Log10. Horizontal line represents 37 U/ml

Association of Restaging CA 19-9 with PD, Postoperative Recurrence, and Survival

Of the 129 patients in whom restaging levels were evaluable, 108 (84%) had no evidence of disease progression and performance status sufficient for surgery following induction therapy (median restaging CA 19-9 40 U/ml, mean 109 ± 290 U/ml, range 1–2,699 U/ml) and 21 did not (median restaging CA 19-9 372 U/ml, mean 1,152 ± 1,981 U/ml, range 13–6,927 U/ml, P < 0.001). In all, 93 (72%) of 129 patients completed all therapy including PD (median restaging CA 19-9 34 U/ml, mean 83 ± 150 U/ml, range 1–934 U/ml) and 36 patients did not (median 106 U/ml, mean 785 ± 1,619 U/ml, range 7–6,927 U/ml, P < 0.001).

The AUC for restaging CA 19-9 as a marker of completing all therapy including PD was 0.74 (95% CI 0.64–0.84); the cutoff that maximized both sensitivity (72%) and specificity (69%) of this test was 61 U/ml (Table 3, Fig. 1). Independently, the optimal cutoff of 61 U/ml was associated with an NPV of 49%. The NPV of this cutoff was even lower (28%) when the test was applied only to patients who were considered resectable upon restaging; the test therefore had little power to identify patients with radiographically occult disease progression. The highest restaging CA 19-9 level in patients who underwent potentially curative PD was 934 U/ml (Fig. 3). In contrast, the PPV of the test for completing all therapy including PD was 86% at a cutoff of 61 U/ml; when evaluated only in the 108 patients with evaluable restaging levels and a performance status suitable for surgery and no evidence of disease progression, the PPV was 93%.

Table 3 Resection rate and overall survival of 129 patients with evaluable restaging CA 19-9 levels stratified by cutoff
Fig. 3
figure 3

Restaging serum CA 19-9 levels of patients stratified by resection and recurrence status at last follow-up. No patient with a restaging CA 19-9 ≥1,000 U/ml underwent resection. Y-axis scale is Log10. Horizontal line represents 37 U/ml

Although restaging CA 19-9 at all cutoff levels was a useful prognostic indicator with regard to overall survival, significance was not maintained when only patients who underwent PD were considered.

Change in CA 19-9 and Correlation with PD, Survival, and Treatment Effect

Of 82 patients in whom both pretreatment and restaging CA 19-9 levels were evaluable, pretreatment CA 19-9 was <37 U/ml in 18 (22%) patients. CA 19-9 remained within the normal range upon restaging in 16 (89%) of these 18 patients; in the remaining 2 patients, CA 19-9 increased only marginally (to 44 and 74 U/ml). Therefore, we analyzed the significance of change in serum CA 19-9 between pretreatment and restaging by examining only the 64 patients with pretreatment CA 19-9 above the upper limit of normal. Overall, the 52 patients in whom CA 19-9 levels decreased had more favorable survival than the 12 patients in whom levels remained stable or increased [25.7 months (95% CI 18.5–32.9 months) versus 10.4 months (95% CI 0–21.4 months), P = 0.01], and were more likely to undergo PD (77% versus 42%, P = 0.02). However, the median survival of the five patients in whom CA 19-9 did not change or increased over the course of treatment but who underwent PD was similar to that of the 40 patients who underwent PD after a decline in CA 19-9 [20.9 months (95% CI 10.7–31.1 months) versus 28.3 months (95% CI 23.8–32.9 months), P = 0.41]. The PPV and NPV of a drop in CA 19-9 to predict PD was 77% and 58%, respectively; when evaluated at restaging only in 54 patients taken to surgery, the PPV and NPV were 89% and 44%, respectively.

In the 59 patients with both evaluable pretreatment and restaging CA 19-9 levels and a treatment effect score from the PD specimen, no association was observed between the change in serum CA 19-9 over the course of induction therapy and the grade of treatment effect observed in the surgical specimen (P = 0.74). Similarly, no association was observed when we analyzed only the 44 patients who underwent PD and in whom pretreatment CA 19-9 was above the upper limit of normal (P = 0.43).

Discussion

Patients with resectable PC who undergo PD benefit from adjuvant therapy; current trials for resectable disease no longer have a control arm which receives surgery alone.12,23,24 Unfortunately, up to 56% of patients do not receive postoperative therapy when planned, due largely to delayed surgical recovery or early tumor recurrence.2527 Neoadjuvant treatment sequencing ensures that all patients with resectable PC who undergo PD receive multimodality treatment. Neoadjuvant strategies also lead to lower than expected rates of lymphatic metastasis and positive surgical margins, enrich the population of patients who undergo PD with those most likely to benefit from surgery, and contribute to actual 5-year survival rates as high as 27%.2830 Successful neoadjuvant treatment approaches require sequential staging evaluations to select those patients who will benefit from surgery—perhaps best considered as one of the earliest forms of personalized cancer care. We performed this analysis to determine whether CA 19-9 could prospectively identify those patients in whom radiographically occult advanced disease will preclude completion of a multidisciplinary strategy employing neoadjuvant therapy and PD.

An elevated CA 19-9 level at diagnosis in patients with radiographically resectable PC has been reported to signify occult disease that will prohibit primary resection.8,10 Our results suggest that this is not necessarily the case when surgery is preceded by induction therapy. Indeed, of 78 patients with an evaluable pretreatment CA 19-9 level above the normal range, 52 (67%) underwent PD, of whom 15 (22%) died of another cause or had not recurred at last follow-up. All patients in our study with an evaluable pretreatment CA 19-9 level greater than 1,125 U/ml either did not undergo PD or ultimately recurred after PD. However, although small patient numbers preclude rigorous statistical analysis, it is interesting that 9 of 16 (56%) patients with radiographically resectable disease and a pretreatment CA 19-9 level ≥ 1,000 U/ml underwent PD following neoadjuvant therapy, only 4 of these 9 patients recurred within 2 years, and the median overall survival of these resected patients approached 3 years. It may be that the antitumor effects of induction therapy alter the expected relationship between CA 19-9 and tumor burden over time. Our study assessed CA 19-9 only in the setting of normal bilirubin and included a more homogenous population of patients than prior studies, which also may have made differences between patient subgroups more subtle. Either way, these data support caution in the use of pretreatment CA 19-9 as an eligibility criterion for enrollment into clinical trials of neoadjuvant therapies for patients with resectable PC, as has been employed in trials of postoperative therapy (i.e., CONKO-001).12

Pretreatment CA 19-9 has also been reported to be a marker of overall prognosis for patients treated with initial surgery.8,31 In this analysis, pretreatment CA 19-9 within the normal range was associated with favorable overall survival. Our inability to demonstrate similar prognostic power when a cutoff of 37 U/ml was applied to the subgroup of patients who underwent PD may be due to the relatively small number of patients analyzed. Nonetheless, our data, combined with those of Berger et al., suggest that a normal CA 19-9 level upon diagnosis may indicate slightly more favorable tumor biology independent of the initial therapeutic approach.31

Response of CA 19-9 to surgical and adjuvant therapy has been reported to be a measure of therapeutic efficacy.8,11 Four analyses have examined the change in CA 19-9 over the course of nonoperative therapies prior to surgery. Three of these were small studies analyzing primarily patients with advanced, nonsurgical disease, who were treated in the absence of a defined plan for resection.1618 The results of these studies suggested the possibility that CA 19-9 might be used as a crude measure of response to preoperative therapy. However, the heterogeneity of the patient populations studied makes this conclusion difficult to apply to individual patients with resectable disease who are being considered for neoadjuvant treatment prior to planned PD. Indeed, a recent prospective study of neoadjuvant chemoradiation prior to planned resection in 28 patients with resectable PC was unable to demonstrate any correlation between change in CA 19-9 and therapeutic response or ultimate resectability.15 Importantly, this study was small and did not take into account the effects of hyperbilirubinemia; the changes observed in CA 19-9 over the course of induction therapy may have been influenced by biliary decompression and not the anticancer therapy alone.

Data from the 82 patients in our study in whom both pretreatment and restaging CA 19-9 levels were evaluable affirm that both the restaging CA 19-9 level and the change in CA 19-9 over the course of neoadjuvant therapy are clinically relevant prognostic markers; in general, low restaging values are better than high values, and a decline in CA 19-9 following induction therapy is more favorable than a rise. However, four important caveats must be noted with regard to these observations. First, the PPV of the restaging CA 19-9 (86%) and the change in CA 19-9 (77%) for completing all therapy including PD were similar to that of the standard restaging evaluation (radiography and physical examination) alone (86%). Second, restaging CA 19-9 and its change from the pretreatment level were both associated with low NPV for competing PD; therefore, neither test effectively excluded radiographically occult metastatic disease at time of restaging. Third, although the number of patients analyzed was relatively small, the median survival of patients who underwent PD in the setting of restaging CA 19-9 higher than all cutoff values, or with stable or increased restaging CA 19-9, was similar to the median survival of patients who underwent PD in whom CA 19-9 levels were below each cutoff value or fell. Finally, we were unable to demonstrate any correlation between change in CA 19-9 level and response to treatment as assessed histopathologically.

This study has two potential limitations. The first is our inability to differentiate between patients with low but detectable level of CA 19-9 and patients with Lewisa-b- blood type who do not secrete CA 19-9.22 The extent to which our results have been influenced by this is difficult to determine as few studies have examined the prognosis of Lewis antigen-negative patients. Available data suggest that Lewisa-b- patients have a prognosis similar to, but perhaps even more favorable than, patients with CA 19-9 levels that are detectable but within the normal range or slightly elevated.11,31 Future trials are necessary to clearly define the cancer biology of this group of patients.

A second potential limitation of this study is the exclusion of significant numbers of patients from analysis due to elevation in serum bilirubin. This is particularly true in the pretreatment setting: 67 of 174 patients with an available pretreatment CA 19-9 level were excluded from analysis due to concomitant obstructive jaundice. Hyperbilirubinemia, however, can confound measurements of CA 19-9 levels and can introduce significant error into analyses in which CA 19-9 levels associated with both normal and elevated bilirubin levels are considered.7,21 Indeed, as we have argued, this represents a major limitation of other studies.10,15 Importantly, we found that the demographics, clinical factors, and outcomes of patients with and without an evaluable CA 19-9 at each time point were comparable, suggesting that the exclusion criteria used in this study actually strengthen our conclusions (as opposed to weaken them).

In summary, based upon these data, we offer the following conclusions with regard to use of CA 19-9 in the evaluation of patients with resectable PC treated with neoadjuvant therapy. Serum CA 19-9 levels within the normal range at diagnosis will most often remain normal after induction therapy, and patients with a normal pretreatment CA 19-9 level can be expected to have favorable prognosis compared with those with an elevated level. Nonetheless, the presence of an elevated pretreatment serum CA 19-9 level may not preclude completion of all therapy to include PD. Similarly, both a low restaging CA 19-9 level and a decline over the course of induction therapy are associated with undergoing successful PD; however, a persistently elevated CA 19-9 level at restaging does not reliably signify disease progression and may not preclude successful PD. Based upon these findings, we recommend that therapeutic decision-making with regard to use of neoadjuvant therapy and PD for patients with potentially resectable PC remain largely based on expert clinical assessment and high-quality radiographic staging.