Carcinoembryonic Antigen
Marcadores tumoraisÚltima revisão: 7 de abril de 2026. Abordagem de fontes: contexto padrão de interpretação laboratorial, material médico de referência e orientações clínicas ou de saúde pública quando relevantes.
O que é Carcinoembryonic Antigen?
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is a glycoprotein involved in cell adhesion that was first identified in 1965 in extracts of human colon carcinoma tissue and fetal gut. It belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily and is anchored to the cell membrane via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) linkage. During fetal development, CEA is produced in gastrointestinal tissue and its production normally decreases after birth, with low levels present in the blood of healthy adults.
CEA is the most widely used tumor marker for colorectal cancer (CRC). Its primary clinical utility lies in monitoring for recurrence after curative surgery, assessing response to chemotherapy in metastatic disease, and aiding prognostic stratification. Elevated preoperative CEA is an independent adverse prognostic factor in colorectal cancer. CEA is not suitable for screening because it lacks sensitivity for early-stage disease and is elevated in many benign conditions and other malignancies. Smoking is a well-established cause of mildly elevated CEA in the absence of malignancy.
Por que isso importa
CEA is the standard serum marker for colorectal cancer surveillance. A rising CEA after curative surgery is often the earliest sign of recurrence, preceding imaging findings by several months, and may prompt earlier intervention with potentially curative salvage surgery. In metastatic colorectal cancer, serial CEA tracks chemotherapy response. Preoperative CEA >5 ng/mL is an adverse prognostic factor. While CEA is elevated in multiple cancer types, its clinical validation is strongest for colorectal cancer.
Faixas de referência normais
| Grupo | Faixa | Unidade |
|---|---|---|
| Non-smokers | 0–3.0 | ng/mL |
| Smokers | 0–5.0 | ng/mL |
As faixas de referência podem variar entre laboratórios. Sempre compare seus resultados com as faixas fornecidas pelo seu local de exame.
O que significam níveis altos de CEA
Causas comuns
- Colorectal cancer (most validated use)
- Smoking (mild elevations up to 5–10 ng/mL)
- Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's, ulcerative colitis)
- Pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer
- Gastric, breast, and lung cancers
- Liver cirrhosis and hepatitis
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Hypothyroidism
- Cholecystitis
Possíveis sintomas
- Change in bowel habits
- Rectal bleeding or blood in stool
- Unexplained weight loss
- Abdominal pain or cramping
- Fatigue and weakness
- Iron deficiency anemia
O que fazer: In known colorectal cancer patients, a rising CEA warrants imaging (CT of chest, abdomen, pelvis) to identify the site of recurrence. If CEA rises postoperatively but imaging is negative, PET/CT or colonoscopy may be considered. For initial elevations without a cancer diagnosis, investigate benign causes (smoking, inflammatory conditions, liver disease) and consider repeat testing in 4–8 weeks. Persistent unexplained elevations should prompt further investigation including colonoscopy.
O que significam níveis baixos de CEA
Causas comuns
- Normal physiological state
- Successful surgical resection or treatment of cancer
Possíveis sintomas
- No symptoms associated with low CEA
O que fazer: Low CEA is normal and expected. After colorectal cancer surgery, normalization of CEA (within 4–6 weeks postoperatively) is a favorable prognostic indicator. However, some colorectal cancers do not produce CEA, so a normal level does not guarantee the absence of disease. Continued surveillance with imaging and colonoscopy is still necessary.
Quando o exame de CEA é recomendado?
- Preoperative staging and prognosis in colorectal cancer
- Post-surgical surveillance for colorectal cancer recurrence (every 3–6 months for 2 years, then every 6 months for 3 more years)
- Monitoring response to chemotherapy in metastatic colorectal cancer
- Evaluating unexplained liver metastases of unknown primary
Perguntas frequentes
Biomarcadores relacionados
Referências e abordagem de revisão
As páginas do glossário de biomarcadores são explicações educativas e devem ser interpretadas junto com as faixas de referência e observações fornecidas pelo seu laboratório e pelo seu médico. Para conhecer nossos padrões editoriais e processo de revisão, veja nossa Política editorial e a nossa revisão de conteúdo.
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Enviar resultados de exames →Aviso médico: Estas informações são apenas educativas e não substituem orientação, diagnóstico ou tratamento médico profissional. As faixas de referência podem variar entre laboratórios. Sempre converse com seu profissional de saúde sobre a interpretação dos seus resultados específicos.