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Neoplastic Cells, Circulating clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05187767 Recruiting - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

Impact of ctDNA in Cancer Early Detection and STAS Evaluation in Patients With GGOs

Start date: April 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The aim of the study is the early and non-invasive diagnosis of lung cancer in patients with pulmonary ground glass opacity. In particular, objective of the study is to evaluate the presence or absence of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) on the peripheral blood of patients with evidence of ground glass opacity(GGO) at CT scan and to evaluate the role that this can play in the diagnostic / therapeutic process. The ctDNA evaluation will be performed at the first radiological finding and subsequently correlated with the malignancy of the lesion based on the radiological / histological criteria regularly used in international protocols. Secondary objective is the correlation, in patients with malignant GGO undergoing surgical treatment, of the ctDNA presence and tumor spread through the air spaces (STAS), and its correlation with local relapses.

NCT ID: NCT05127096 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Colorectal Cancer Screening

Sample Collection Study for the CellMax Life Circulating Tumor Cell and Circulating Tumor DNA Platforms for the Early Detection of Colorectal Cancer and Adenomas

Start date: December 15, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to collect clinical specimens from subjects with a diagnosis of colorectal cancer/advanced adenoma or undergoing a screening colonoscopy and meeting study eligibility criteria.

NCT ID: NCT05109130 Active, not recruiting - Rectal Neoplasms Clinical Trials

Change of Circulating Tumor Cells During Laparoscopic or Transanal Endoscopic Surgery for Rectal Cancer.

Start date: October 18, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The primary purpose of this study is to compare the changes of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) at different time points in rectal cancer patients undergoing laparoscopic or transanal endoscopic radical resection. Our secondary purpose is to explore the effects of perioperative circulating tumor cells on tumor recurrence and metastasis.

NCT ID: NCT05091190 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Metastatic Head and Neck Cancer

Immunotherapy Clearance and Phenotype of Circulating Tumor Cells in Lung and Head and Neck Cancers

MADMAS
Start date: October 27, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Immunotherapy is widely administrated as anticancer treatment in metastatic setting. Despite a proved efficacy in several cancer types and clinical situations, it exists a wide variability of responses in terms of efficacy and toxicity. The rate of responders depends mostly on the type of pathology, with 40% of responders among melanoma patients, 20-30% among lung and head and neck cancer patients and only 1% of responders among pancreatic cancer patients. Thus, the main challenge today is to be able to select patients for whom the treatment is likely to be effective. Several studies suggested that tumors with a high mutational burden and expressing PD-L1 are better responders to immunotherapy. However, a proportion of PD-L1 negative cancers responds to immunotherapy, suggesting that other parameters have to be considered together with PD-L1 expression. Of that, the immunotherapy clearance seems to have an impact on overall survival, but larger studies, including different molecules and cancer types, are needed to better understand the correlation between the clearance and the response to immunotherapy. Tumor cells released from the primary tumor in the blood circulation (CTCs, for circulating tumor cells) are considered as "liquid biopsies", as they contain the entire genetic and phenotypic information representative of the tumor, including PD-L1 expression. Thus, the variation of PD-L1 expression under treatment can be easily followed-up on blood samples collected during the time. The objective of MADMAS is to study the correlation between the immunotherapy clearance, measured at the different times during treatment, and the variation of the number of CTCs expressing PD-L1 after two cures of treatment. MADMAS will enroll patients with lung or head and neck cancers, treated with an immunotherapy-based therapy. Blood samples will be collected at the baseline and before the first two cures of treatment. The immunotherapy clearance will be measured with an innovative approach of Mass Spectrometry, and PD-L1 expression will be measured on CTCs, purified with a highly sensitive microfluidics technology.

NCT ID: NCT05070637 Completed - Clinical trials for Renal Cell Carcinoma

Circulating Tumor Cell Reducing No-touch Nephrectomy

CITO-CERENE
Start date: September 27, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will study circulating tumor cell (CTC) release during laparoscopic radical nephrectomy (LRN) for RCC. The main objective is to determine if CTC release can be reduced during RN by using a no-touch technique, with an early renal pedicle ligation. The investigators also aim to describe the CTC profile in terms of CTC count (CTCn), epithelial/mesenchymal status, and CTC cellular features in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients, stratified by "primary tumor, regional nodes, metastasis" (TNM) staging, histological subtype, and other clinical and radiological features. Patients undergoing RN will enter a two-arm prospective single-center randomized controlled trial (RCT), comparing a no-touch RN technique, with direct pedicle ligation (Group A) vs. the more conventional approach of kidney traction and manipulation to reach the renal pedicle before its ligation (Group B). A microfluidic size-based CTC isolation device will be used to capture and count CTCs from peripheral blood samples of these patients. CTCs will be identified by staining with antibodies to cytokeratin 8/18, vimentin, 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), and cluster of differentiation antigen 45 (CD45). CTC release will be correlated with the disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS). The investigators will determine if CTC reducing no-touch radical nephrectomy technique improves these hard outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT05008796 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

PD-L1 Expression on CTCs in HNSCC Patients Underwent Curative CCRT

Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is the 4th highest incidence of cancer and 6th of cancer death of the males in Taiwan. Because the patients were mainly middle-aged male, the disease eventually resulted in a huge loss of labor force, productivity and a huge burden of family supports and medicinal costs. Unfortunately, the incidence and death of HNSCC seemed to be increasing in Taiwan. Currently, the primary treatments of HNSCC are mainly surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy or targeted therapy or concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Immune checkpoint inhibitors become an emerging treatment in recent days. However, how to select adequate patient by using biomarkers remains an unsolved problem. Therefore, investigator have developed a new method for isolation and detection of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in HNSCC patients. Moreover, the expression of immune markers (such as PD-L1, PD-L2, PD-1) on CTCs or immune cells might be a good target to study. Investigator's preliminary data found CTCs and circulating cancer stem-like cells but not PD-1 expression levels on peripheral T cells in patients with recurrence or metastasis HNSCC did not associated with overall survival. Therefore, investigators are wondering if PD-L1 more specific due to it expression on cancer cells. Therefore, in the 3-year project, investigators will utilize developing device and protocol in first year and then enroll 40 freshly diagnosed participants with head and neck cancer at stage III-IV with intent to receive curative concurrent chemo-radiotherapy (CCRT), and then analyze CTCs, PD-L1 expression levels on CTCs. Blood sample will be taken before, during (definition: 3-6 weeks after start RT) and after (definition: 4 +/-2 weeks after complete CCRT) completion of CCRT. Investigators will also enroll 10 health participants and taking blood sample for 3 times and follow up. Further statistical tests with clinical conditions (disease status, treatment effects, progression or distant metastasis and death) will be performed to elucidate their clinical significance. Hopefully, investigators will clarify the correlation between clinical outcomes and expression of PD-L1 on CTCs in head and neck patients. This could be a new biomarker for clinical cancer care.

NCT ID: NCT04993014 Recruiting - Breast Neoplasms Clinical Trials

Circulating Tumor Cells and Treatment De-escalation After Neoadjuvant Therapy for HER2 Positive Breast Cancer

HER2Cell
Start date: March 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Phase II unicentric randomized trial which will include early HER2 positive breast cancer patients, candidate to neoadjuvant therapy with trastuzumab and pertuzumab. Circulating tumor cells will be collected at neoadjuvant therapy baseline. Patients with pathological complete response will be randomized in 1:1 ratio for adjuvant trastuzumab (arm A) versus trastuzumab + pertuzumab (arm B) in a two factorial design: group A, with HER2 positive CTCs and group B, with HER2 negative/absent CTCs.

NCT ID: NCT04972461 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Circulating Tumor Cells

Therapeutic Response Evaluation by CTC Expansion System

Start date: August 8, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Among biomarkers, CTCs are a convenient, sensitive and biologically informative option. CTC detection could be considered a real-time "liquid biopsy" approach and contains several advantages such as minimally invasive, easy and safe to perform, and multiple samples can be taken over time, better prognosis to indicate an elevated risk of metastases, improved therapy monitoring, providing live disease status information., However, the number of CTCs is very low, so the establishment of cell culture from CTCs becomes the most challenging over the past year. In this study, we develop a short-term CTC expansion protocol combined with a new surface coating technique. Expanded circulating tumor cells will provide genetic information and develop oncology drug screening platform, which provides an opportunity to monitor response to therapy noninvasively.

NCT ID: NCT04917289 Not yet recruiting - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

CTC vs Radiography as the Evidence of Recurrence in Colorectal Cancer Patients

Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study enrolled patients who underwent R0 resection of tumor and had elevated tumor biomarkers (CEA, CA19-9). After enroll the study, a CTC test will performed and patients who had positive CTC will be randomly assigned to two groups. The control group will continue follow-up until radiological recurrence appear, the treatment group will start treatment or change the current adjuvant regimen. First endpoint is OS. The secondary endpoint is DFS, adverse event.

NCT ID: NCT04917276 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Circulating Tumor Cell

Treatment Response Prediction System of mCRC Patients Based on CTC

Start date: June 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study enrolling patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Detecting CTC at different points in the treatment process. Descripting the molecular atlas of CTC in mCRC patients. Building and validating a response prediction system of mCTC patients.