Objective: To investigate the role of serum inhibin A, inhibin pro-alphaC immunoreactivity, activin A, and follistatin in postmenopausal women with epithelial ovarian cancer.
Design: Case-control study.
Sample: e Serum samples from 27 postmenopausal women with epithelial ovarian cancer and 54 controls from the general population participating in an ovarian cancer screening trial.
Results: Women with epithelial ovarian cancer had significantly higher serum levels of pro-alphaC immunoreactivity (P = 0.03), activin A (P = 0.004) and follistatin (P = 0.04), but not inhibin A (P = 0.13). Using the 90th centile in the control group as the cut off, pro-alphaC levels were elevated in 41% of women with epithelial ovarian cancer, while inhibin A was elevated in only 15%. Using the 95th centile as the cut off, serum pro-alphaC was elevated in only 11% of women with epithelial ovarian cancer (3/27), while activin A was elevated in 48% (11/23). Follicle stimulating hormone levels were significantly lower in women with epithelial ovarian cancer (P = 0.01). Although, inhibin-related peptides can modulate follicle stimulating hormone levels, there was no correlation between inhibin A, pro-alphaC immunoreactivity, activin A or follistatin and follicle stimulating hormone.
Conclusion: These data demonstrate that though there is preferential secretion of precursor forms of the alpha subunit rather than dimeric inhibin A by epithelial ovarian cancer, pro-alphaC is unlikely to be a useful tumour marker. Activin A is more commonly elevated in postmenopausal women with epithelial ovarian cancer and its role as a tumour marker in the diagnosis and screening of epithelial ovarian cancer warrants further evaluation.