original article

Oman Medical Journal [2016], Vol. 31, No. 5: 336-344

Evaluation of HE4, CA-125, Risk of Ovarian Malignancy Algorithm (ROMA) and Risk of Malignancy Index (RMI) in the Preoperative Assessment of Patients with Adnexal Mass

Khawla Al Musalhi1*, Manal Al Kindi1, Faiza Al Aisary1, Fatma Ramadhan2, Thuraya Al Rawahi3, Khalsa Al Hatali3 and Waad-Allah Mula-Abed1

1Department of Chemical Pathology, Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman

2Department of Histopathology, Directorate of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman

3Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Royal Hospital, Muscat, Oman

article info

Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate the validity and compare the performance of cancer antigen-125 (CA-125), human epididymis protein 4 (HE4), the risk of malignancy index (RMI), and the risk of ovarian malignancy algorithm (ROMA) in the diagnosis of ovarian cancer in patients with ovarian lesions discovered during their preoperative work-up investigations. Methods: This prospective, cross-sectional study looked at patients who attended the gynecology department at the Royal Hospital, Muscat, from 1 March 2014 to 30 April 2015, for the evaluation of an ovarian lesion. The inclusion criteria included women who underwent surgical intervention and who had a preoperative pelvic ultrasound with laboratory investigation for CA-125 and HE4. The study validated the diagnostic performance of CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA using histopathological diagnosis as the gold standard. Results: The study population had a total of 213 cases of various types of benign (77%) and malignant (23%) ovarian tumors. CA-125 showed the highest sensitivity (79%) when looking at the total patient population. When divided by age, the sensitivity was 67% in premenopausal women. In postmenopausal women, CA-125 had lower sensitivity (89%) compared to RMI, HE4, and ROMA (93% each). A high specificity of 90% was found for HE4 in the total patient population, 93% in premenopausal women and 75% in postmenopausal women. CA-125 had the highest specificity (79%) in postmenopausal women. Both CA-125 and RMI were frequently elevated in benign gynecological conditions particularly in endometriosis when compared to HE4 and ROMA. We also studied modifications of the optimal cut-offs for the four parameters. Both CA-125 and RMI showed a significant increase in their specificity if the cut-off was increased to ≥ 60 U/mL for CA-125 and to ≥ 250 for RMI. For HE4, we noted an improvement in its specificity in postmenopausal women when its cut-off was increased to140 pmol/L. Conclusions: HE4 and ROMA showed a very high specificity, but were less sensitive than CA-125 and RMI in premenopausal women. However, they were of comparable sensitivity in postmenopausal women and were valuable in distinguishing benign ovarian tumors or endometriosis from ovarian cancer. Modifying the cut-off values of the different markers resulted in a higher accuracy compared to the standard cut-offs, but at the expense of reduced sensitivity.

Ovarian cancer is a common gynecological cancer in women. It is characterized by having a poor prognosis with a five-year survival rate of less than 35%. The majority of cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage.1 In Oman, ovarian cancer is the seventh most common cancer in women.2 The Ministry of Health reported in its Cancer Incidence Registry (2011) a crude incidence of 1.8 and age-standardized incidence rate of 3.1 per 100,000, taking into consideration the estimated mid-year Omani population in 2011 of 2,137,807 with sex ratio of 983 females per 1000 males.2

Different guidelines are available for the management of different cancers including ovarian cancer. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines on the recognition and initial management of ovarian cancer addresses the issue of screening symptomatic women presenting to primary care.3 Important factors for the early diagnosis of ovarian cancer need health providers and women to be made aware of this disease and primary care physicians to initiate investigations early. Thus, it is crucial to assess certain risk factors for women who present with pelvic masses by optimizing health policies and providing sensitive and specific biomarkers for detecting the disease early; hence, providing early surgical staging procedures followed by appropriate treatment in specialized reference centers helping to stop overburdening these centers with benign manageable conditions.

Currently, the standard tools for detecting ovarian cancer are pelvic ultrasonography and measuring serum cancer antigen 125 (also called carbohydrate antigen 125; CA-125) levels, which could be combined with the menopausal status to calculate the risk malignancy index (RMI) and is considered a simple and affordable test.4 However, due to the performance limitations of the standard tools and aims to improve the sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value of tumor markers in ovarian cancer, a number of new biomarkers have been studied and evaluated to be used in combination with CA-125. Of these, human epididymis protein 4 (HE4), was identified as a promising marker.5 HE4, also called whey-acidic-protein (WAP) and four-disulfide core domain protein 2 (WFDC2), was originally described as an epididymis-specific protein that belongs to a four-disulfide core family. This comprises a heterogeneous group of small acid- and heat-stable proteins of divergent function.6 It is highly over-expressed in epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC) compared to normal ovarian epithelium.7–9

Moore et al10 developed a new numerical score to predict the risk of ovarian malignancy called the Risk of Ovarian Malignancy Algorithm (ROMA), which incorporates the results of HE4, CA-125, and menopausal status. ROMA was studied by many investigators and found to be a promising biomarker for predicting ovarian cancer.11 HE4 together with CA-125 can improve the accuracy of ovarian cancer detection. Additionally, HE4 is considered a valuable biomarker for discriminating ovarian cancer from ovarian endometriosis making it a more specific marker than CA-125.12

The aim of this study was to evaluate the validity of CA-125 as a currently used tumor marker for ovarian cancer and HE4 as a new biomarker for ovarian cancer in a pilot of patients presenting with ovarian lesions during their preoperative workup investigations. We then compared the performance of the four parameters, CA-125, HE4, RMI, and ROMA to determine the best marker to discriminate between benign and malignant ovarian tumors and the appropriate cut-offs of these markers.

Methods

This prospective, cross-sectional study was done at the Royal Hospital, Muscat, using a sample of 213 patients who attended the gynecology department between 1 March 2014 and 30 April 2015 for the evaluation of an ovarian mass. All patients were examined and assessed using pelvic ultrasonography by specialized gynecologists. Blood specimens from these patients were obtained during their first assessment for laboratory work up. All cases underwent surgical intervention at a later stage to obtain a histopathological diagnosis, which was used as the gold standard test. All clinical and laboratory data were collected using the hospital information system AL Shifa 3 Plus.

The blood samples of the patients were collected during their first assessment, before surgical intervention, using standard serum separator tubes (SST) for different biochemical profiles including tumor markers. The samples were centrifuged immediately after collection to get the sera and then analyzed. The remaining sera were stored at -20 oC. After collecting the required number of specimens, serum HE4 was measured.

Both CA-125 and HE4 assays were done by a two-step immunoassay using the Architect i2000 SR Immunoassay Analyzer (Abbott Laboratories, Illinois, US), which uses chemiluminescence microparticle immunoassay technology. All manufacturer recommendation for maintenance, calibration, and internal quality assessment were followed for both assays. The between run precisions of CA-125 were 2.8%, 3.2%, and 2.2% for the levels of internal quality control (low, middle, and high concentration of CA-125) materials, respectively. In-house analytical verification of HE4 was performed before it was adopted, as it was a newly introduced test in the Royal Hospital. Within- and between-run imprecision studies for HE4 assay were done by running three levels of internal quality control five times in the same run and five times on five different days. The within-run precisions of the three levels of internal quality control for the HE4 assay were 1.9%, 2.8%, and 2.2% whereas the between-run precisions were 1.5%, 4.8%, and 5.7%, respectively.

Patients were grouped according to age (pre- and postmenopausal) and lesion type (benign or malignant). The postmenopausal status was defined as one year or more of amenorrhea or an age of 50 years or more if the woman had undergone a hysterectomy. From the variables collected, the RMI was calculated using the formula: RMI 2 = U × M × serum CA-125

where U is the total ultrasound score, M is the menopausal status and CA-125 value in U/mL.13

ROMA was calculated using CA-125 and HE4 results as per the manufacturer’s recommendations (Abbott ARCHITECT ci8200; Abbott Laboratories, Illinois, US). This was followed as recommended by Moore et al, by calculating a predictive index (PI) for premenopausal and postmenopausal patients separately using equation 1 and 2 as follows:10

    1. PI for premenopausal women: PI = -12.0 + 2.38*lnHE4 + 0.0626*ln(CA-125)

2. PI for premenopausal women: PI = -8.09 + 1.04*lnHE4 + 0.732*ln(CA-125)

The ROMA score was then obtained using the equation: ROMA % = exp PI / (1 + exp PI) × 100% where Exp PI = e PI

The cut-off value for CA-125 was 35 U/mL as recommended by the manufacturer and the cut-off value for RMI was 200 as proposed by Jacobs et al.14 The cut-off value for HE4 was 70 pmol/L, and for ROMA for high-risk premenopausal and postmenopausal women was 13.1% and 27.7%, respectively.10

A comparison study was done for the four parameters (CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA) and the validity indicators including sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV) and efficiency were calculated. Both the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and area under the curve (AUC) were calculated, and the most valid cut-offs were determined accordingly. For all statistical comparisons, a p-value < 0.050 was accepted as statistically significant. All statistical analysis was done using SPSS Statistics (SPSS Statistics, Chicago, US) version 22.

Results

This prospective study included 213 women who attended the gynecology clinic at the Royal Hospital, Muscat. One-hundred and sixty-two women (76%) were premenopausal, of whom 21 (13%) had a malignant ovarian lesion. Fifty-one (24%) women were postmenopausal, and 27 (53%) of these had malignant ovarian lesion [Table 1].

The total number of ovarian specimens was 213, of which 165 (77.5%) were benign, and 48 (22.5%) were malignant tumors. Table 2 shows the histopathology results of all ovarian specimens in pre- and postmenopausal cases. The histopathology classifications of ovarian tumors included surface epithelial-stromal, sex cord stromal, and germ cell tumors. Lesions that did not fit into one of these three groups were termed “others”.

Table 1: Patients’ demographic characteristics. Data are presented as mean±SD and median (range) unless otherwise indicated.

 

All, n = 213

Premenopausal, n = 162

Postmenopausal, n = 51

 

B

M

p-value

B

M

p-value

B

M

p-value

n (%)

165 (78)

48 (23)

 

141 (87)

21 (13)

 

24 (47)

27 (53)

 

Age, years

35±14

33 (13–80)

50±18

55 (21–83)

0.001

31±9

31 (13–50)

32±8

33 (21–49)

0.374

61±10

59 (47–80)

64±9

64 (51–83)

0.595

BMI,
kg/m2

28±6

27 (15–48)

27±7

27 (15–45)

0.374

27±6

27 (15–44)

28±7

28 (15–49)

0.767

30±6

29 (22–48)

26±6

23 (19–39)

0.463

B: benign; M: malignant; Null: nulliparity; Primi: primi-parity (1 child); Multi: multi-parity (>1 child).

Table 2: Histopathological types of ovarian tumors in the study population.

Tumor

Benign

Malignant

 

Type

All,

n = 165

Pre,

n = 142

Post,
n = 24

Type

All,

n = 48

Pre,

n = 21

Post,

n = 27

Epithelial

Serous cystadenoma

17

12

5

Serous adenocarcinoma

20

5

15

 

Mucinous cystadenoma

10

8

2

Mucinous adenocarcinoma

1

1

0

 

Endometrial cysts

34

34

0

Endometrial adenocarcinoma

3

1

2

 

Sermo-mucinous

1

1

0

Undifferentiated

1

0

1

         

Borderline epithelial

7

6

1

 

Total, n (%)

62 (37.6)

55 (38.7)

7 (29.2)

Total, n (%)

32 (66.7)

13 (62.0)

19 (70.4)

Sex cord

Fibroma

4

3

1

Granulosa

5

4

1

 

Thecoma

3

2

1

       
 

Total, n (%)

7 (4.2)

5 (3.5)

2 (8.3)

Total, n (%)

5 (10.4)

4 (19.0)

1 (3.7)

Germ cell

Teratoma

33

29

4

Yolk sac cancer

1

1

0

 

Struma ovarri

2

2

0

Immature teratoma

2

2

0

 

Total, n (%)

35 (21.2)

31 (21.8)

4 (16.7)

Total, n (%)

3 (6.3)

3 (14.3)

0 (0.0)

Others

Simple cyst

9

5

4

Secondaries

7

1

6

 

Functional cyst

26

23

3

Lymphoma

1

0

1

 

Abscess

7

5

3

       
 

Para-ovarian cyst

4

4

0

       
 

Fibroid

9

8

1

       
 

Normal

6

5

1

       

Pre: pre-menopausal; Post: post-menopausal.

The four variables (CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA) were tested in the study by detailed descriptive analysis within the two main groups of benign and malignant lesions [Table 3]. In this setting, to test for a significant difference, non-parametric t-tests were applied (Kruskal-Wallis test and Mann-Whitney U test). All four parameters showed significantly higher median values within the malignant group when compared to the benign group. The distribution of the four variables was also checked through the different histopathology lesions. All showed a significant difference (p < 0.050) between benign and malignant groups except for the sex cord tumors in which the four tested variables were not statistically different between the lesion types.

Using the proposed cut-offs for the four tested variables, the validity indicators for the four parameters including their sensitivity, specificity, NPV, PPV, efficiency, and AUC are shown in
Table 4.

Table 3: CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA values in all, pre-menopausal (pre) and post-menopausal (post) patient groups at their standard cut-offs. Data presented as mean ± SD and median (range).

Variable

All

Pre

Post

 

Benign

Malignant

Benign

Malignant

Benign

Malignant

CA-125,

U/mL

62±132

23(1–978)

1039±2326

261 (7–14507)

67±141

24 (4–2296)

927±3153

65 (7–14507)

31±40

20 (5–199)

1125±1454

458 (8–5733)

RMI

189±427

45 (4–3184)

10751±19543

1777 (7–91728)

164 ±374

40 (4–2296)

3640±12631

260 (7–58028)

336±651

140 (20–3184)

15961±22332

7264 (128–91728)

HE4,

pmol/L

65.8±210.8

43 (18–2677)

688.8±1122.4

207 (27–5932)

42.3±43.8

41.8 (18–537)

387.8±1280.8

66.9 (27–5932)

180.3±537.8

51.0 (24–2677)

923.0±941.2

7264 (128–91728)

The p-value is < 0.001 for all variables (CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA) between benign and malignant tumor in all, pre- and postmenopausal women.

Table 4: Validity indicators of the tested parameters in all, pre-menopausal (pre) and post-menopausal (post) patient groups at their standard cut-offs.

Indicators

Age group

CA-125
≥35 U/mL

RMI ≥200

HE4
≥70 pmol/L

ROMA pre ≥13.1 post ≥27.7

Sensitivity

All

79

77

71

75

 

Pre

67

57

57

52

 

Post

89

93

93

93

Specificity

All

62

82

90

88

 

Pre

60

85

93

90

 

Post

79

67

75

78

NPV

All

91

93

91

92

 

Pre

92

93

94

93

 

Post

86

89

90

90

PPV

All

38

56

68

65

 

Pre

20

36

55

44

 

Post

83

76

81

83

Efficiency

All

71

80

81

82

 

Pre

63

71

75

71

 

Post

84

80

84

85

AUC

All

0.809

0.853

0.824

0.837

 

Pre

0.673

0.724

0.674

0.680

Table 5: Comparison of the tested four parameters among patients with endometriosis and other benign ovarian lesions. Data are presented as mean ± SD and median (range).

Tested parameters

Endometriosis, n = 34

Other benign lesions,
n = 132

p-value

CA-125,
U/mL

133±197

43±102

<0.001

 

64 (9–973)

19 (1–978)

 

RMI

327±557

153±381

<0.001

 

111 (26–2296)

36 (4–3184)

 

HE4, pmol/L

43.6±14.1

71.6±236.3

0.845

 

41.1 (21–78)

42.8 (18–2677)

 

ROMA, %

6.9±5.6

9.4±14.4

0.462

Out of the 48 ovarian cancer cases, CA-125 detected 38 cases while HE4 detected 34. The four parameters were able to detect the various types of ovarian cancer except for sex cord/granulosa tumors in which these tools detected one out of five cases. The four parameters detected most epithelial tumors except for borderline lesions. CA-125 was able to detect four out of seven cases, and HE4 was able to detect two of seven cases only. The validity indicators for the four variables were also tested in EOC lesions alone and were compared to all cases of ovarian cancers. The highest calculated sensitivity was for CA-125 (88% in EOC vs. 79% in all) followed by RMI (84% in EOC vs. 77% in all) and ROMA (84% in EOC vs. 75% in all). HE4 measured the least sensitivity (78% in EOC vs. 71% in all).

In contrast, the false positive rates in different benign lesions were similar in most lesions except for endometriosis, teratoma, and fibroid lesions in which CA-125 level was raised in 27/34, 7/33, and 6/9 of cases respectively, compared to the HE4 level that was raised only in 3/34, 0/33 and 3/9 of cases, respectively. Two cases of fibroid lesions had Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) stage 5 and one fibroid case had ascites, which are known to contribute to the false positive results.15,16

To compare endometriosis with other benign ovarian lesions, the medians of the four parameters were calculated in both groups as shown in Table 5. Both HE4 and ROMA showed no significant difference between the two types of lesions whereas for CA-125 and RMI the medians revealed significantly higher levels in the endometriosis lesion group.

Figure 1 shows the ROC curve of the four parameters in all, premenopausal, and postmenopausal groups. RMI showed a slightly higher AUC than the other parameters in all (0.853) and the premenopausal (0.724) women. However, all tested parameters were slightly better than CA-125 in these groups. ROMA and RMI had a slightly higher AUC in the postmenopausal group (0.944 and 0.941, respectively) and the AUC of HE4 was the lowest in this group (0.897). Using the ROC curve, different cut-offs were investigated to determine the optimal cut-off to get the appropriate sensitivity and specificity [Table 6].

Table 6: Sensitivity and specificity of the four parameters for premenopausal and postmenopausal patients at the standard cut-offs and optimal identified cut-offs.

Parameter

Group

Standard cut-offs

Optimal cut-offs

   

Cut-off

Sensitivity

Specificity

Cut-off

Sensitivity

Specificity

CA-125, U/mL

All

35

79

62

82

71

86

 

Pre

35

67

60

60

57

78

 

Post

35

89

79

71

89

96

RMI

All

200

77

82

348

73

90

 

Pre

200

57

85

240

57

88

 

Post

200

93

67

944

85

96

HE4, pmol/L

All

70

71

90

77.5

71

96

 

Pre

70

57

93

63.6

91

52

 

Post

70

93

75

137.9

89

92

ROMA, %

All

-

75

88

22.7

71

96

 

Pre

13.1

52

90

16.4

52

94

Figure 1: The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and area under the curve (AUC) of CA-125, RMI, HE4, and ROMA for (a) all, (b) premenopausal, and (c) postmenopausal patients.

Discussion

CA-125 in this study had the highest sensitivity (79%) in the total study population and the premenopausal group (67%) compared to the other markers. However, in the postmenopausal group, CA-125 had a sensitivity of 89%, lower than the 93% sensitivity of the other three markers. In contrast, a high specificity of 90% was found for HE4 in the total study population. This was 93% in the premenopausal group and 75% in the postmenopausal group. CA-125 had the highest specificity of 79% in the postmenopausal group, compared to 78% for ROMA, 75% for HE4 and 67% for RMI. Hence, HE4, and ROMA showed a high specificity, and although they were less sensitive than CA-125 and RMI in premenopausal women, they were of comparable sensitivity in postmenopausal women in addition to their higher specificity.

All epithelial tumors were detected by one or more of the four markers except the borderline lesions. Of the seven cases with borderline epithelial lesions, CA-125 was the best marker for their detection. CA-125 detected four out of seven of cases, RMI and ROMA detected three out of seven of cases, and HE4 detected two of seven of cases. The four markers detected only one of five cases of sex cord/granulosa tumor.

Ferraro et al5 reported in their meta-analysis overlapped sensitivity of 79% for HE4 and CA-125, but a significantly higher specificity for HE4 (93%) compared to CA-125 (78%). Similarly, Anastasi et al12 reported a higher sensitivity for CA-125 (90%) compared to HE4 (87%) and a lower specificity for CA-125 (70%) compared to HE4 (100%) in the diagnosis of EOC. A prospective study by Richards et al17 noted that HE4 had a better specificity than CA-125 for the diagnosis of ovarian cancer in all women as well as in premenopausal women in addition to the higher ROC-AUC for HE4 compared to CA-125 in all women. ROMA was not inferior to the RMI calculation in their study population.

We reported that both CA-125 and HE4 were not sensitive to diagnose borderline ovarian cancer. To increase their sensitivity and specificity in this setting, it was suggested to perform serials of CA-125 and HE4 measurements along with ultrasound assessment.18 Also, CA-125 was reported as a poor marker for detecting granulosa cell tumors.19 When analyzing the false positive rates in different benign lesions, CA-125 was frequently elevated in patients with benign gynecological conditions particularly in premenopausal women compared to HE4 (38% vs. 10%, respectively). Some cases (mainly endometriosis) were found to have high levels of CA-125 and RMI compared to HE4 and ROMA. The medians of HE4 and ROMA values showed no significant difference between benign ovarian lesions and endometriosis, whereas the results of CA-125 and RMI revealed significantly higher levels in endometriosis. HE4 and ROMA can be useful markers when CA-125 levels are falsely elevated particularly in cases of endometriosis. Others also reported that measuring HE4 can be a valuable approach for distinguishing patients with ovarian endometrioma or other benign adnexal masses from those with ovarian malignancy, which may reduce other costs by reducing expensive diagnostic procedures.12 Similar to CA-125, HE4 values were noted to be falsely raised in the two cases with CKD stage 5 and one case with ascites, which has been previously reported for both markers.16

In this study, RMI appears to be comparable to ROMA, but a critical inspection may be needed in this setting since in our patient series the RMI score was calculated using an objective ultrasound assessment, which depends solely on the experience of the gynecologist. The calculated RMI value may be affected if ultrasound examination is performed by non-trained personnel including primary health care clinicians. Anton et al20 and Moore et al21 assessed the impact of using advanced computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging on RMI score and its outcome. They found that the performance was not affected by these modifications, and no differences were noted in the accuracy of the four parameters for differentiating between the types of ovarian masses.

For CA-125 and RMI, we observed a significant increase in their specificity if the cut-off was increased to ≥ 60 U/mL for CA-125 and to ≥ 250 for RMI. For HE4, we noted an improvement in its specificity in the postmenopausal group when its cut-off was increased to 140 pmol/L. No significant change in the performance of ROMA was noted when its cut-off was altered for any groups. Winarto et al22 reported a better prediction of ovarian malignancy when using modified cut-offs for the different markers compared to the standard cut-offs, which resulted in higher specificity and accuracy but at the expense of reduced sensitivity. They reported that at modified cut-off values of CA-125 (165.2 U/mL), HE4 (103.4 pmol/L), RMI (368.7) and ROMA (28/54), the sensitivity and specificity was 67% and 75.4% for CA-125; 73.1% and 85.2% for HE4; 73.1% and 80.3% for RMI; and 77.6% and 86.9% for ROMA. When compared to the standard cut-off values, the sensitivity and specificity was 91% and 24.6% for CA-125; 83.6% and 65% for HE4; 80.6% and 65.6% for RMI; and 91.0% and 42.6% for ROMA.

Moszynski et al23 studied the usefulness of HE4 as a second-line test in the assessment of women with suspicious ovarian tumors. They concluded that HE4 had a higher specificity, accuracy, and positive predictive value than CA-125. However, the two markers are complementary and may be useful in situations when less experienced sonographers perform a pelvic ultrasound. This may suggest that HE4 is a more reliable test than RMI since the latter is dependent on ultrasound score. Therefore, taking into account the high sensitivity of CA-125 and high specificity of HE4, a panel of both tests using algorithms such as ROMA appears to be advantageous. Moore et al10,24 reported a sensitivity of 94.3% and specificity of 75% in one study and a sensitivity of 76.5% and specificity of 95% in another study when both were combined to differentiate benign from malignant ovarian lesions. The authors also reported a sensitivity of 93.8%, a specificity of 74.9% and a negative predictive value of 99% when using both markers in a ROMA.25 The combined panel has the advantage of being less likely to be elevated in benign tumors compared to CA-125, particularly in differentiating endometriosis from malignant ovarian tumors.

Recently a novel diagnostic index combining HE4, CA-125, and age was reported as a simple index that could be used to speed up the referral of women with suspected ovarian cancer and was independent of ultrasound and menopausal status.26 Additionally, there are genetic algorithms for risk assessment of ovarian cancer screening that have been recently described by applying classic genetic pedigree with a panel of biomarkers that identify both phenotypic and genotypic expression of high-risk markers followed by conventional and advanced ultrasonography. This approach might improve the screening process of asymptomatic high-risk women using this technology in specialized centers in the future.27 However, the inclusion of HE4 and use of algorithms in the workup investigations has to consider its cost-effectiveness and impact on the total budgetary expenditure of the overall service balanced by the additional advantages of its use, whether alone or in combination with CA-125 that allows calculation of the ROMA. This includes the number of patients’ referrals to gyne-oncology clinics as the available evidence still support CA-125 with lowered cut-off as a cost-effective strategy.28

Conclusion

Our study indicates that CA-125 and HE4, as well as ROMA and RMI values, are useful tools to differentiate between benign and malignant ovarian tumors. Although HE4 and ROMA were less sensitive than CA-125 and RMI in premenopausal women, they were of comparable sensitivity in postmenopausal women in addition to their higher specificity. HE4 and ROMA were more useful in distinguishing other benign ovarian tumors or endometriosis from ovarian cancer. HE4 can be a useful marker in situations where pelvic ultrasonography is performed by less experienced sonographers as in a primary care setting to triage further women presenting with adnexal lesions.

Disclosure

The authors declared no conflicts of interest. No funding was received for this study.

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