Most of the successful serological markers used in pancreatic cancer diagno
sis detect circulating mucins which are back-secreted into the blood circul
ation. These markers have sensitivities (70-95%) and specificities (70-95%)
which compare well with those achieved by imaging tests yet they have been
subjected to very critical review and are still not widely used. There see
m to be two main reasons for this: firstly, they are biochemical tests and
clinicians tend to expect and demand 100% accuracy for such tests; secondly
, the failure of serological tests to prove adequate for screening seems to
have deterred clinicians from using them in more appropriate situations. I
t should have been realised that screening of asymptomatic cases was never
going to be achievable until methods could be found for defining a high ris
k population. With a prevalence of about 10 per 100000, say 20 per 100000 a
dults, a test with 99% specificity (far in excess of that achievable by any
current imaging or biochemical tests) would produce 1000 false positive re
sults for every 20 true positives, a hopelessly unacceptable ratio. In symp
tomatic patients the odds are very different. The prevalence of pancreatic
cancer may be as high as about 15% in patients over 40 years old who have u
nexplained upper abdominal pain or weight loss and in whom upper G-I endosc
opy is negative. In these patients serological tests (with a false positive
rate of about 15%) will fare at least as well as imaging tests. Combinatio
n of the two modalities i.e, an imaging test such as ultrasound or CT scann
ing together with a biochemical test such as CA19.9, DuPan2 or CAM17.1 seem
s both logical and highly practical and has been shown to enhance diagnosti
c accuracy. The best established pancreatic tumour marker assays all detect
mucins. Pancreatic cancers have a particular propensity to secrete mucin i
nto the blood either because of mechanical blockage of the pancreatic duct,
loss of polarity of pancreatic cells or early blood vessel invasion. Other
mucin secreting cancers e.g. colon and ovary can also cause increased conc
entrations of the same serological markers albeit less frequently but this
is not usually a major cause of confusion since the clinical features are u
sually distinguishable. Serological markers correlate with tumour staging b
ut are nevertheless still effective in resectable cancer. They may also hav
e a useful role in monitoring:after surgical resection or chemotherapy. A s
erological mucin assay such as CA19.9, CAM17.1, DuPan2 or SPan-1 should be
used in conjunction with a scanning test in the diagnosis of patients over
40 with endoscopy-negative abdominal pain, in the investigation of patients
with a known pancreatic mass or cyst, and for monitoring following resecti
on or chemotherapy for pancreatic cancer.