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Title: [The significance of urine di-acetyl spermine level as a cancer marker for colorectal cancer]. Author: Takahashi K, Hiramatsu K, Kawakita M, Mori T, Yamaguchi T, Matsumoto H, Miyamoto H, Tamamori Y. Journal: Rinsho Byori; 2004 Apr; 52(4):332-5. PubMed ID: 15164601. Abstract: We analyzed the significance of the measurement of urine di-acetyl spermine (DiAcSpm) as a cancer marker for colorectal cancer treatment. We measured both the urine DiAcSpm(ELISA, normal range: 0-0.25 mumol/creatinine) and serum CEA (normal range: 0-5.0 ng/ml) of preoperative and postoperative colorectal cancer patients every month. We compared the positive rate from the cancer stage and the power of prognostic prediction. We divided the colorectal cancer patients into 4 groups: Group A: both levels were high; Group B: only the CEA level was high; Group C: only the DiAcSpm level was high; Group D: both levels were within a normal range. The positive rates of DiAcSpm and CEA from cancer staging were as follows: Stage 0: 62% and 9.5%, Stage I: 60% and 10%, Stage II: 70% and 42%, Stage III: 82% and 47%, and Stage IV: 88% and 63%, respectively. There was a significant difference (p < 0.0001) between both levels, especially for early-stage cases. The two-year survival rate was 0% in Group A, 100% in Group B, 72.7% in Group C and 100% in Group D. The difference among the 4 groups was significant (p < 0.0001). This showed that urine DiAcSpm predicted the prognosis after colorectal cancer surgery more exactly than serum CEA.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]