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CYFRA 21-1

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(Cytokeratin-19 Fragment – Lung Cancer Tumor Marker)

Synonyms

  • CYFRA 21-1
  • Cytokeratin-19 fragment
  • CK-19 fragment
  • Keratin-19 soluble fragment
  • Lung cancer cytokeratin marker

Units of Measurement

  • ng/mL
  • µg/L
  • µg/dL
  • µg/100 mL
  • µg%

1 ng/mL = 1 µg/L
µg/dL = µg/100 mL = µg%

Description

CYFRA 21-1 is a soluble fragment of cytokeratin-19, a structural protein present in epithelial cells. When epithelial tumor cells undergo apoptosis or necrosis, CK-19 fragments are released into the bloodstream.

CYFRA 21-1 is a tumor marker primarily used in lung cancer, especially:

  • Non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC)
  • Most specific for squamous cell carcinoma subtype

It is also helpful for treatment monitoring, prognosis, and detecting recurrence.

Physiological Role

  • CK-19 is part of the cytoskeleton of epithelial cells.
  • Not normally shed in large amounts.
  • Tumor cell breakdown → elevated CYFRA levels.

Clinical Significance

Elevated CYFRA 21-1

1. Lung Cancer (Most Important Use)

Highly useful in:

  • NSCLC (squamous cell type) – highest sensitivity
  • Advanced/metastatic disease
  • Monitoring therapy response
  • Detection of recurrence

Not used as a screening test, but valuable after diagnosis.

2. Other Malignancies

Moderate elevation in:

  • Esophageal cancer
  • Bladder cancer
  • Head & neck cancers
  • Cervical cancer
  • Breast cancer (rare)

3. Benign Conditions (Mild Elevation)

Can show slight increases in:

  • Pneumonia
  • Chronic obstructive lung disease
  • Pulmonary fibrosis
  • Tuberculosis
  • Renal insufficiency

These elevations are generally <10 ng/mL.

Low or Normal CYFRA 21-1

Normal values do not exclude lung cancer.
Some tumors (adenocarcinoma) may not shed CK-19 significantly.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + IASLC + NCCN + Mayo + ARUP)

Normal Range (Adults)

  • < 3.3 ng/mL (≈ <3.3 µg/L)**
    Ranges vary slightly by kit (some use <3.5 ng/mL).

Diagnostic Interpretation

CYFRA 21-1 LevelInterpretation
< 3.3 ng/mLNormal
3.3–10 ng/mLSuspicious; benign lung disease or early cancer
> 10 ng/mLSuggestive of malignancy, especially NSCLC
> 20 ng/mLHighly suggestive of advanced squamous cell carcinoma

Monitoring

  • Falling levels → good treatment response
  • Rising levels → recurrence or progression

Unit Meanings

UnitMeaning
ng/mLnanogram per milliliter
µg/Lmicrogram per liter
µg/dLmicrogram per deciliter
µg/100 mL = µg%identical to µg/dL

Diagnostic Uses

1. Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC)

  • Best marker for squamous cell carcinoma
  • Useful for:
    • Baseline assessment
    • Monitoring chemotherapy
    • Monitoring immunotherapy
    • Detecting residual disease
    • Detecting recurrence after surgery or radiation

2. Prognostic Marker

Higher CYFRA levels correlate with:

  • Higher tumor burden
  • Poorer survival
  • Advanced staging

3. Use with Other Lung Markers

Often combined with:

  • CEA
  • NSE
  • Pro-GRP
  • SCC antigen

The combination improves diagnostic sensitivity.

4. Monitoring Non-malignant Lung Disease

Sometimes used to track severity in:

  • ILD
  • Pulmonary fibrosis
  • Post-infection lung damage

Analytical Notes

  • Serum or plasma acceptable
  • Avoid hemolysis
  • Renal failure may mildly elevate levels
  • Immunoassays (ECLIA/CLIA) commonly used
  • Serial measurements should use the same platform

Clinical Pearls

  • CYFRA 21-1 is more sensitive than CEA for squamous cell carcinoma.
  • Not useful for screening the general population.
  • Very high levels (>20 ng/mL) almost always indicate advanced NSCLC.
  • Post-treatment rising CYFRA levels detect recurrence earlier than imaging in some cases.
  • CYFRA is often elevated even when troponins/BNP are normal in patients with lung cancer.

Interesting Fact

CYFRA 21-1 was developed after identifying a specific 21-kDa fragment of cytokeratin-19 released during tumor cell apoptosis - hence the name.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Tumor Markers.
  2. IASLC Lung Cancer Biology Guidelines.
  3. NCCN Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Guidelines.
  4. IFCC Tumor Marker Working Group.
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - CYFRA 21-1.
  6. ARUP Consult - Lung Cancer Markers.
  7. MedlinePlus / NIH - CYFRA 21-1.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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