Clinical significance of serum ferritin in patients with renal cell carcinoma

1995 
Abstract Objectives We examined the serum ferritin levels in 158 patients with renal cell carcinoma and 101 healthy control subjects between 1987 and 1994 to investigate the value of this intracellular protein as a tumor marker. Methods Preoperative and postoperative serum ferritin values were analyzed and the patients were stratified to three groups accordingly: group 1, patients with normal values (N-N); group 2, those with preoperative high and postoperative normal (H-N); and group 3, those with preoperative normal or high with postoperative high ferritin levels (H-H). Results The mean serum ferritin level in 101 healthy control subjects was 85.7 ± 63.6 ng/mL (range, 3.7 to 265.2). The upper limit of normal, which was calculated by adding 2 standard deviations to the mean was 219.9 ng/mL Mean serum ferritin in patients with renal cell carcinoma was 274.2 ± 276.3 ng/mL, which was significantly higher than that of control values ( P Conclusions Our study shows that although serum ferritin was a useful tool in diagnosing and staging patients, it was not ideal in early stages. However serum ferritin seems to be more valuable for follow-up; postoperative values, indeed, predict the prognosis.
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