Serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen as an early indicator of response during therapy of cervical cancer.
BackgroundPretreatment serum squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCCA) is a prognostic biomarker in women with cervical cancer. SCCA has not been evaluated as an early indicator of response to chemoradiation therapy (CRT). The molecular role of the two SCCA isoforms, SCCA1 (SERPINB3) and SCCA2 (SERPINB4), in cervical cancer is unknown. We hypothesised that changes in serum SCCA during definitive CRT predicts treatment response, and that SCCA1 mediates radiation resistance.MethodsPatients treated with definitive CRT for cervical squamous carcinoma with serum SCCA measured were included. SCCA immunohistochemistry was performed on tumour biopsies. Post-treatment FDG- PET/CT, recurrence, and overall survival were recorded. Radiation response of cervical tumour cell lines after SCCA1 expression or CRISPR/Cas9 knockout was evaluated by clonogenic survival assay.ResultsPersistently elevated serum SCCA during definitive CRT was an independent predictor of positive post- therapy FDG-PET/CT (P=0.043), recurrence (P=0.0046) and death (P=0.015). An SCCA1-expressing vector increased radioresistance, while SCCA knock out increased radiosensitivity of cervical tumour cell lines in vitro.ConclusionsEarly response assessment with serum SCCA is a powerful prognostic tool. These findings suggest that escalation of therapy in patients with elevated or sustained serum SCCA and molecular targeting of SCCA1 should be considered.