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CA 19-9 (Carbohydrate Antigen 19-9)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Sialyl-Lewisᵃ Antigen – Tumor Marker for Pancreaticobiliary Cancers)

Synonyms

  • CA 19-9
  • Carbohydrate Antigen 19-9
  • Sialyl-Lewis A antigen
  • Pancreatic cancer marker
  • GI tumor marker

Units of Measurement

  • U/mL (Units per milliliter - standard)
  • kU/L (kilo-units per liter)

1 U/mL = 1 kU/L

Description

CA 19-9 is a tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen (sialyl-Lewisᵃ epitope) expressed on epithelial cells of the:

  • Pancreas
  • Biliary tract
  • Stomach
  • Colon

The primary clinical role of CA 19-9 is in pancreatic adenocarcinoma, specifically for:

  • Treatment monitoring
  • Recurrence detection
  • Assessing resectability
  • Prognosis estimation

It is NOT a screening test for normal-risk individuals.

Physiological Source

Low-level expression occurs in:

  • Pancreatic ductal cells
  • Bile duct epithelium
  • Gastric/colonic epithelium
  • Salivary glands

Upregulated in malignancy and cholestasis.

Clinical Significance

Elevated CA 19-9

1. Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma - Most Important

  • CA 19-9 > 1000 U/mL → highly suggestive of advanced pancreatic cancer
  • Used to:
    • Evaluate resectability
    • Monitor chemotherapy response
    • Detect recurrence

CA 19-9 is elevated in 70–90% of pancreatic cancers.

2. Cholangiocarcinoma / Biliary Tract Cancer

Levels often high.

3. Gastrointestinal Cancers

Moderate elevation in:

  • Gastric cancer
  • Colorectal cancer
  • Hepatocellular carcinoma

4. Benign Hepatobiliary Conditions

Often cause mild-to-moderate elevations:

  • Obstructive jaundice
  • Gallstones
  • Cholangitis
  • Pancreatitis
  • Cirrhosis

⚠️ Cholestasis can raise CA 19-9 to >1000 U/mL, mimicking cancer.

5. Lung & Gynecologic Cancers

Occasional rise.

Low or Undetectable CA 19-9

Not clinically significant unless genetically absent.

Lewis Antigen–Negative Phenotype

5–10% of the population lacks Lewis a/b antigen and cannot produce CA 19-9 even in cancer.
→ false-negative results possible.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + NCCN + Mayo + ARUP)

Normal Range

  • < 37 U/mL (most laboratories)

Interpretation

  • 37–100 U/mL → mild elevation (often benign)
  • > 100 U/mL → suspicious, especially with imaging findings
  • > 300 U/mL → higher specificity for malignancy
  • > 1000 U/mL → highly predictive of unresectable pancreatic cancer
    (Except in cholestasis)

Prognosis

High pretreatment CA 19-9 → poorer survival.

Unit Meanings

UnitMeaning
U/mLUnits per milliliter
kU/Lkilo-units per liter

Diagnostic Uses

1. Pancreatic Cancer

  • Evaluate baseline tumor burden
  • Monitor treatment response
  • Detect recurrence post-surgery
  • Assess resectability (very high CA 19-9 suggests non-resectability)

2. Biliary Tract Cancer

CA 19-9 supports diagnosis and monitoring.

3. Differentiation of Benign vs Malignant Jaundice

Not perfect, but:

  • Very high CA 19-9 with mild bilirubin elevation → likely cancer
  • High bilirubin + high CA 19-9 → may normalize after biliary drainage

4. Monitoring GI Malignancies

Useful in:

  • Gastric cancer
  • Colon cancer
  • Liver cancer (adjunct to AFP)

5. Cystic Pancreatic Lesions

Elevated CA 19-9 may indicate malignant potential.

Analytical Notes

  • Immunoassay based
  • High bilirubin can elevate CA 19-9 → recheck after biliary drainage
  • Always interpret with imaging (CT/MRI/EUS)
  • Use the same assay for serial monitoring
  • Hemolysis minimal effect

Clinical Pearls

  • Not a screening test for pancreatic cancer due to many false positives.
  • CA 19-9 may normalize after relieving biliary obstruction even if cancer is present.
  • Lewis-negative individuals will never produce CA 19-9, even with pancreatic cancer.
  • A rising trend is more important than a single value.
  • CA 19-9 cannot distinguish benign pancreatitis from cancer without imaging.

Interesting Fact

CA 19-9 is derived from the sialylated Lewisᵃ blood group antigen, explaining why individuals lacking this antigen genotype cannot express CA 19-9.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Tumor Markers.
  2. NCCN Guidelines - Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma.
  3. ASCO - Tumor Marker Recommendations.
  4. IFCC - Tumor Marker Standardization.
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - CA 19-9.
  6. ARUP Consult - Pancreatic Cancer Markers.
  7. MedlinePlus / NIH - Tumor Marker Overview.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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