How should CA‑125 be used and interpreted in the evaluation of an ovarian mass in pre‑menopausal and post‑menopausal women?

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CA-125 in Ovarian Mass Evaluation

Primary Recommendation

CA-125 should never be used as a standalone test for evaluating ovarian masses; transvaginal ultrasound with grayscale morphologic assessment and color/power Doppler is the gold standard first-line diagnostic approach, with CA-125 reserved only for risk stratification when ultrasound shows indeterminate or suspicious features. 1

Fundamental Principle: Ultrasound First, CA-125 Second

  • Ultrasound is superior to CA-125 in distinguishing benign from malignant ovarian lesions, with CA-125 performing worse than ultrasound alone in multiple studies 1
  • CA-125 only improved specificity for lesions already suspected to be malignant on ultrasound imaging, not for general evaluation 2, 1
  • The diagnostic algorithm must start with comprehensive transvaginal ultrasound including both grayscale and color/power Doppler to assess cyst morphology and vascularity patterns 1

Critical Limitations of CA-125

Sensitivity Problems

  • CA-125 has only 50% sensitivity for stage I ovarian cancer, meaning it misses half of early malignancies even when present 1, 3
  • CA-125 may be low or normal in low-grade malignancies and borderline tumors 1

Specificity Problems

  • CA-125 is frequently elevated in benign conditions including endometriosis, adenomyosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, functional hemorrhagic cysts, menstruation, pregnancy, peritonitis, and any condition causing pleural effusion or ascites 1, 4
  • Marked elevations of CA-125 greater than 1000 U/mL, and even up to 5000 U/mL, can occur in benign conditions 4

When to Order CA-125

Postmenopausal Women

  • Order CA-125 if any of the following are present on ultrasound: 2, 1
    • Elevated CA-125 (>35 U/mL) combined with nodular or fixed pelvic mass
    • Complex morphology including solid components, papillary projections, or thick septations
    • O-RADS 4 lesions (10-50% malignancy risk) for determining need for gynecologic oncology referral
    • O-RADS 5 lesions (50-100% malignancy risk) for surgical planning
  • The ACOG/SGO criteria recommend referral for postmenopausal women with elevated CA-125 combined with concerning clinical or imaging features 2

Premenopausal Women

  • Order CA-125 only if: 2
    • Ultrasound shows indeterminate or suspicious features suggesting possible malignancy
    • There is metastatic disease or ascites present
    • Strong family history of breast or ovarian cancer exists
  • The ACOG/SGO criteria recommend referral for premenopausal women with CA-125 >200 U/mL (though some experts suggest >50 U/mL is a better discriminator) 2
  • In premenopausal women, ROMA (which incorporates CA-125) showed better diagnostic performance than CA-125 alone with superior specificity (0.926 vs 0.787) and accuracy (0.875 vs 0.777) 5

Additional Tumor Markers in Specific Scenarios

  • In women younger than 35 years, also measure AFP and beta-hCG to exclude germ cell tumors 6, 3
  • When CA-125 is normal but imaging suggests clear cell, mucinous, or endometrioid tumors, measure CA 19-9 3

Interpretation Algorithm

Step 1: Ultrasound Risk Stratification

  • Apply IOTA Simple Rules or O-RADS classification based on morphologic features 1
  • IOTA Simple Rules demonstrated sensitivity of 0.93 and specificity of 0.81 for predicting malignancy 2
  • Benign features (IOTA B features): unilocular cyst, solid components <7 mm, acoustic shadows, smooth multilocular tumor, diameter <100 mm, no blood flow 2
  • Malignant features (IOTA M features): irregular solid tumor, ascites, ≥4 papillary structures, irregular multilocular-solid tumor, diameter ≥100 mm, very strong flow 2

Step 2: CA-125 Interpretation in Context

  • Postmenopausal women: Use 35 U/mL threshold (98.5% specificity) 1, 6
  • Premenopausal women: Use 200 U/mL threshold per ACOG/SGO, though 50 U/mL may be more discriminatory 2
  • Serial CA-125 measurements showing progressive elevation over time are more concerning than single values, as malignancies demonstrate rising trends 1, 6

Step 3: Combined Interpretation

  • Normal CA-125 + benign ultrasound features: Low risk, consider surveillance 1
  • Normal CA-125 + suspicious ultrasound features: Ultrasound takes precedence; suspicious features warrant referral even with normal CA-125 1, 3
  • Elevated CA-125 + benign ultrasound features: Likely benign condition causing false-positive CA-125; correlate clinically 1
  • Elevated CA-125 + suspicious ultrasound features: High risk; refer to gynecologic oncology 2, 1

Critical Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Never use CA-125 as a screening or standalone diagnostic test, as this leads to false reassurance when normal and unnecessary anxiety/intervention when elevated 1
  • Never interpret elevated CA-125 as diagnostic of malignancy without correlating with ultrasound morphology, as benign conditions frequently cause elevation 1
  • Never rely on a single normal CA-125 value to exclude malignancy in a complex cyst with suspicious ultrasound features, given the 50% false-negative rate in early-stage disease 1, 3
  • Never order CA-125 for simple ovarian cysts, as it provides limited diagnostic value and may lead to unnecessary interventions 6
  • Never test CA-125 in patients with ascites from any cause, as it is universally elevated and nonspecific in this setting 3

Role of Advanced Imaging

  • When ultrasound shows indeterminate features and CA-125 is elevated, MRI with IV contrast is the next best step for further characterization, not CT scanning 6, 3
  • MRI is superior to CT for characterizing adnexal masses and determining organ of origin 6

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References

Guideline

Diagnostic Approach for Hemorrhagic or Complex Ovarian Cysts

Praxis Medical Insights: Practical Summaries of Clinical Guidelines, 2026

Guideline

Guideline Directed Topic Overview

Dr.Oracle Medical Advisory Board & Editors, 2025

Guideline

Tumor Markers for Ovarian Mass Evaluation

Praxis Medical Insights: Practical Summaries of Clinical Guidelines, 2026

Guideline

Risk Assessment for Ovarian Cancer

Praxis Medical Insights: Practical Summaries of Clinical Guidelines, 2026

Professional Medical Disclaimer

This information is intended for healthcare professionals. Any medical decision-making should rely on clinical judgment and independently verified information. The content provided herein does not replace professional discretion and should be considered supplementary to established clinical guidelines. Healthcare providers should verify all information against primary literature and current practice standards before application in patient care. Dr.Oracle assumes no liability for clinical decisions based on this content.

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