Extreme elevation of CA19-9 in patient with endometriosis-associated cancer: A brief report and review of the literature

In: Current Problems in Cancer: Case Reports · 2023 · vol. 11 , pp. 100254 · doi:10.1016/j.cpccr.2023.100254 · W4385605535
article OA: gold CC0 ⤵ 1 in-corpus citation
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-04

This report describes a patient with extremely high CA 19-9 levels and concurrent ovarian and small intestine endometriosis-associated cancers, suggesting this malignancy should be considered in such cases.

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Abstract

CA 19-9 (carbohydrate antigen 19-9) is used as a biomarker for hepatobiliary cancer and is generally not considered helpful in the evaluation of gynecologic cancer. Endometriosis-associated cancers are a subset of gynecologic cancers in which malignancy is found adjacent to endometriosis either within or outside the gynecologic tract. We describe a case of a woman who presented with a CA 19-9 level of 49,469 U/mL who was subsequently found to have two concurrent but separate primary endometriosis-associated cancers involving the ovary and small intestine. Although data regarding the association between CA 19-9 and endometriosis-associated malignancy is lacking, endometriosis is known to be associated with high levels of inflammation which in turn has been associated with higher CA 19-9 levels. The inflammatory response and effect on CA 19-9 levels may be particularly pronounced in cases where endometriosis-associated malignancy involves the peritoneum. The case described suggests that when cancer is suspected in a woman with an extremely high level of CA 19-9 and no apparent hepatobiliary disease, an endometriosis-associated malignancy may be a consideration.

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endometriosis

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last seen: 2026-06-04T00:00:01.174412+00:00
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