Lung Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Comprehensive Evaluation of Circulating Tumor DNA and Circulating Tumor Cells as a Predictive Marker in Lung Cancer
This study evaluates the use of ctDNA and CTCs in predicting disease activity and drug response in lung cancer patients and serves to complement existing methods to achieve a non-invasive and accurate means to guide treatment decisions.
Lung cancer is not only amongst the top 3 most common cancer type in both men and women, but
also the leading cause of cancer mortality in Singapore and the United States. Platinum-based
chemotherapy is currently the mainstay in drug treatment for lung cancer patients although it
only relieves disease-related symptoms temporarily. Recently, the use of molecularly targeted
therapy has led to improved survival in subsets of patients. In particular, the presence of
EGFR or ALK mutations from lung biopsies predicts improved response rate and progression-free
survival from the use of tyrosine kinase inhibitors or crizotinib respectively. Importantly,
EGFR mutations are more common in tumors of Asian patients (about 35%) versus non-Asians
(about 10%).
The main cause of mortality in patients with solid cancers is metastases from dissemination
via blood circulation. The ability to detect the presence of tumor cells in circulation even
before overt metastases occur has evolved rapidly in recent years. The prognostic importance
of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in several cancers has
been found and this technique is widely recognized to be of major clinical and biologic
importance. This study evaluates the use of ctDNA and CTCs in predicting disease activity and
drug response in lung cancer patients and serves to complement existing methods to achieve a
non-invasive and accurate means to guide treatment decisions.
Indeed, the use of ctDNA and CTCs as a marker for risk assessment and treatment monitoring is
advantageous as it is accessible may be monitored on a regular basis on a non-invasive basis.
This will better tailor our surveillance programmes and treatment to optimize disease
outcomes.
The Investigators have developed an EGFR mutation detection kit that detects the 3 main EGFR
mutations at ultrasensitive levels. The Investigators have applied this to a variety of
clinical materials including formalin-fixed paraffin embedded DNA, pleural effusions,
circulating DNA as well as circulating tumor cells and found that the kits can pick up these
mutations with high sensitivity and specificity.
A microsieve membrane filter device to effectively isolate circulating tumor cells from whole
blood sample has been developed by the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology. The
device exploits the size difference between cancer cells and blood cells to achieve the
cancer cell capture on a microsieve filter with > 85% recovery rate from 4.5-ml whole blood
within 10 min, demonstrated with cancer cells spiked into whole blood samples. The device
contains a densely packed pore array (> 8000 pores/mm^2) with an optimized pore diameter of
10 µm. Fluid regulation and cell counting are achieved by a simple vacuum pumping and
laboratory fluorescence microscope. The captured cells are stained with anti-EpCAM-PE for
CTCs, anti-CD45-FITC for white blood cells, and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) for cell
nuclei. The CTCs are identified with anti-EpCAM positive, anti-CD45 negative and DAPI
positive, characterized using a fluorescence microscope.
Hence, from our preliminary studies, the investigators hypothesize that our technology is
useful for isolating circulating tumour cells and that these circulating tumor cells likely
correlate with disease activity and are not found in health individuals.
The monitoring of circulating tumor DNA and circulating tumour cells may provide a clinically
valuable lead time in determining response, compared to conventional radiologic methods.
A cohort of patients will be recruited for a longitudinal cohort study where tissue and blood
are collected for biomarkers. No intervention is envisioned. The study will be conducted over
three years.
Patient Samples and Consent
Prospectively over six years(August 2014 to August 2020), about 150 patients diagnosed with
lung cancer who provide full informed consent to this study will have tumor and/or blood
and/or effusions collected. Patients from other locations may be referred to these sites.
If patients do not consent to collection of blood for clinical studies but have consented and
signed informed operative consent for collection of frozen or formalin-fixed paraffin
embedded material for research purposes including biopsies, cytology or surgical resections
as part of the standard surgical consent form, tumor tissue and normal tissue will be
collected from Changi General Hospital. Tumor staging and grading were obtained from review
of the pathology reports and evaluation of the case notes by individual clinician
investigators. Written informed consent for analysis of prospectively collected clinical
samples will be obtained from all patients, including the consent to obtain a biopsy lung
tissue specimen for research purpose. No other additional procedures are needed other than
the recommended procedure to remove the patient's tissue for assessment of the tumour, be it
bronchoscopy, CT-guided biopsy or open surgery, depending on physician's assessment. Once
routine procedure is completed, one of the tissues will be selected for research purposes.
The "research tissue blocks" will be anonymized and the slides batched for subsequent
examination/verification of tumor presence by a pathologist.
Each prospective patient will provide baseline 3 EDTA tubes of blood (total approximately 30
ml). Urine (~100mL) will be collected at the same time for study of urine DNA.
These blood samples will be centrifuged for 10 minutes at 3000 rpm, for collection of serum
and plasma for validation of biomarkers identified by microarray analysis, selecting for
candidate secreted proteins in the blood.
Effusions (pleural or peritoneal) will be obtained as part of routine therapeutic procedures
as recommended by the treating clinician, where the fluids would otherwise have been
discarded. At no point will effusion fluid be obtained for the sole purpose of this study.
Downstream work in terms of evaluation of the CTCs, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, DNA,
RNA, protein, and other genetic and molecular materials will be performed. Techniques applied
will include quantitative PCR, sequencing, flow cytometry and immunophenotyping,
immunohistochemistry, fluorescent in situ-hybridization, culture, etc.
Mutational analysis:
Genetic material will be extracted from 3-5 mL of materials trapped on sieve and from blood
plasma, as well as relevant material such as effusions or urine. This will be analysed by
quantitative PCR using custom designed primers and/or sequencing. Genetic materials will also
be profiled using next-generation sequencing techniques to identify clinically actionable
mutations such as BRAF, ALK, ROS, RET, etc.
Samples will be processed fresh. Any remaining sample will be separated into buffy coats and
plasma and stored in liquid nitrogen and/or -80C.
Data and specimens are de-identified for laboratory processing. Each site will retain
information linking patient to specimen. This is necessary for determination of follow-up.
Identified data will be located on a networked PC, physically located in Changi General
Hospital and behind institutional firewalls. Individually identifiable data will be retained
in the hospital and will not be shared with the laboratory.
The data will be archived for downstream projects once the study is completed.
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