Tumour Markers (AFP, CA19-9, CEA)

Tumour markers are blood tests sometimes used in gastroenterology and hepatology.

Common ones you’ll see:

  • AFP (alpha-fetoprotein)
  • CA19-9
  • CEA

They can help in certain situations, but:

They are NOT screening tests
and should NOT be used to diagnose cancer alone.

Most mild elevations are benign.

This guide focuses on when to use them and how to interpret them safely.


✅ First principle (most important)

Always ask:

Will this result change management?

If not → don’t send it.

Sending tumour markers “just in case” causes:

  • false positives
  • unnecessary scans
  • anxious patients


🔵 AFP (Alpha-fetoprotein)

Think:
👉 Liver cancer marker


What is it used for?

Main use:

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) surveillance

Especially in:

  • cirrhosis
  • chronic hepatitis B/C

Often combined with:
👉 ultrasound liver


When to request AFP

Appropriate:

  • Cirrhosis surveillance
  • Known liver mass
  • Suspected HCC

Not appropriate:

  • Mild abnormal LFTs
  • Fatty liver
  • General cancer screen

How to interpret

Mild elevation

Common in:

  • active hepatitis
  • cirrhosis
  • inflammation

Does NOT mean cancer


Markedly high / rising AFP

More concerning for:

  • HCC

Especially:

  • new liver lesion on imaging

Trend matters more than single value.


🔵 CA19-9

Think:
👉 Pancreatic/biliary marker


What is it used for?

Mainly:

  • pancreatic cancer
  • cholangiocarcinoma
  • biliary malignancy

Mostly used for:
👉 monitoring known cancer

Not diagnosis.


When to request

Appropriate:

  • Known pancreatic/biliary cancer follow-up
  • Suspicious mass already seen on imaging

Not appropriate:

  • Abdominal pain only
  • Routine workup
  • Screening

Important pitfall (very common exam + ward issue)

CA19-9 rises in:

  • cholangitis
  • obstructive jaundice
  • gallstones
  • pancreatitis
  • benign obstruction

So:

High CA19-9 + jaundice
≠ cancer automatically

Always repeat after obstruction resolves.

Very common mistake.


🔵 CEA (Carcinoembryonic antigen)

Think:
👉 Colorectal cancer marker


What is it used for?

Main use:

  • Monitoring known colorectal cancer after surgery

Detects:

  • recurrence

Not diagnosis.


When to request

Appropriate:

  • known colorectal cancer follow-up

Not appropriate:

  • unexplained anaemia
  • rectal bleeding
  • screening

These patients need colonoscopy, not CEA.


Important pitfall

CEA rises in:

  • smokers
  • inflammation
  • liver disease
  • pancreatitis

Mild elevation is common and non-specific.

Don’t overreact.


✅ Practical summary table

MarkerThinkMain useDon’t use for
AFPHCCcirrhosis surveillancescreening everyone
CA19-9pancreatic/biliarymonitoring known cancerdiagnosing obstruction
CEAcolorectalpost-op monitoringdiagnosing CRC

✅ Step-by-step ward thinking

When someone suggests a tumour marker:

Ask:

  1. Do we already suspect a specific cancer?
  2. Is there imaging evidence?
  3. Will this change management?

If no → don’t send.

Imaging is usually more useful than tumour markers.


✅ Practical scenarios


Scenario 1

Cirrhotic patient for HCC surveillance
→ AFP + ultrasound appropriate


Scenario 2

Obstructive jaundice, CA19-9 high
→ treat obstruction first, repeat later
→ don’t assume cancer


Scenario 3

Iron deficiency anaemia
→ colonoscopy
→ NOT CEA


Scenario 4

Known colorectal cancer post-resection
→ CEA for recurrence monitoring


Scenario 5

Fatty liver with mildly raised AFP
→ usually benign
→ don’t panic


❌ Common junior mistakes

  • Using tumour markers to “rule out cancer”
  • Ordering them before imaging
  • Panicking over mild elevations
  • Using CEA for CRC diagnosis
  • Sending CA19-9 in every jaundiced patient
  • Forgetting benign causes

Remember:
Tumour markers are supportive, not diagnostic.


✅ Simple rule to remember

Think:

  • AFP → liver
  • CA19-9 → pancreas/bile ducts
  • CEA → colon

And:

👉 Use for monitoring, not screening


✅ Take-home concept

Tumour markers rarely diagnose cancer on their own.
Use them in the right clinical context, and always interpret alongside imaging.