Is placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) a useful marker for seminoma?
The usefulness of placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP) as a tumour marker was assessed in 1578 serum samples from 236 patients with seminoma. Smoking habits were known for all but 7 patients (22 samples). Smoking was associated with significantly higher mean levels of PLAP in disease-free patients (28.8 [S.E. 2.1] U/l vs. 15.9 [1.3] U/l in non-smokers). Mean PLAP levels were higher in patients with active disease (78.6 [23.5] U/l in non-smokers and 47.2 [18.5] U/l in smokers). The median values showed a similar trend. However, there was considerable overlap between the various groups and differences between mean and median values indicated that PLAP values were distributed asymmetrically. The predictive value of PLAP as a tumour marker was consequently much less than superficial inspection of these values might suggest. In 97 patients on surveillance, only 2 out of 11 patients who relapsed had elevated PLAP at the time of clinically detectable relapse. With the upper limit of normal P