1 Teratocarcinoma --;2 Mouse Lymphocyte Differentiation Markers --;3 Monoclonal Immunoglobulins As Biomarkers of Cancer --;4 Markers in Human Lymphoid Tumors --;5 Oncofetal Transplantation Antigens --;6 Antigens and the Major Histocompatibility Complex --;7 Hormone-Secreting Tumors --;8 Enzymes and Isoenzymes in Cancer --;9 Pregnancy Proteins as Tumor Markers --;10 Alphafetoprotein --;11 Carcinoembryonic Antigen A: Chemistry and Biology --;12 Theoretical and Practical Consideration of the Utility of the Radioimmunoassay for Carcinoembryonic Antigen (CEA) in Clinical Medicine --;13 Antigens Associated with Human Solid Tumors --;14 Surface Glycolipid and Glycoprotein Antigens --;15 Lectin Interactions with Normal and Tumor Cells and the Affinity Purification of Tumor Cell Glycoproteins --;16 Transfer RNA and Its By-Products as Tumor Markers --;17 Nonhistone Protein Antigens --;18 Fibronectin --;19 Circulating Immune Complexes in Cancer.
The earliest and still most widely used method of identification of cancer tissue or cells is the structural resemblance of cancer tissue to fetal or immature tissue.