Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Microbiome in patients affected by pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma may present specific and identifiable patterns. These variations could affect the surgical outcome and increase the risk of life-threatening infections supported by multidrug-resistant bacteria. The identification of microbial signatures with tumor specificity may have a potential role in postoperative risk stratification. Variation of pancreatic, intestinal or bile microbiome and their relationship can be investigated and measured as promising tools in order to predict and overcome the clinical and infectious burden imposed by MDR infections. The prospect of a potential role for probiotics to promote competition against the pathogens and to improve the gastrointestinal barrier integrity has also been raised. Moreover, if the bacterial composition in human PDAC was confirmed to be distinct from that of the normal pancreas, microbiome variation could be used as a potential biomarker, to assess the potential for malignancy in precursor neoplastic lesions. However, we believe that a preliminary and explorative study is necessary. The study aims to outline the pancreatic microbiome of patients who undergo upfront PD for resectable PDAC and to characterize the possible association between bacterial composition and the occurrence of post-operative complications, particularly POPF and IC.


Clinical Trial Description

Pancreatic cancer is predicted to become the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the western world by 2030. Patients still have a poor prognosis, and a complete surgical resection provides the only potential for long-term cure of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) with a 5-year survival of only around 20%. In addition, despite all the advances and technical modifications developed during this past decade, pancreatic surgery is still hampered by considerable postoperative morbidity. Postoperative pancreatic fistula (POPF), with a range of incidence between 3-45%, and the infectious complications (IC) that occur in nearly one-third of the patients are still the more frequent and dreadful complications after pancreatic resection. Moreover, in patients submitted to pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD), the constantly growing presence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria increases the morbidity and mortality rate. Those complications may also limit access to adjuvant chemotherapy and result in higher costs and longer hospitalization. The high clinical burden of pancreatic surgery, associated with the overall poor outcome of PDAC and worldwide diffusion of antibiotic resistance, suggest the urgent need to enhance our knowledge on new and modifiable risk factors able to affect the surgical, the infectious and the oncological outcomes. The alteration of the microbiome recently emerged as a contributor to oncogenesis, as a risk factor for postoperative morbidity in many intestinal tract malignancies and as one of the leading causes of colonization by resistant pathogenic bacteria. Recent evidence suggests that the pancreas also harbors its microbiome and in PDAC this is markedly more abundant and with different patterns compared to a normal pancreas in both mice and humans. However, the intestinal and PDAC microbiome have never been compared in humans. Alteration of the microbiome induces an adaptive immune suppression and promotes an inflammatory status. Growing literature evidence shows that the microbiome accounts for local and systemic microenvironment changes. These alterations, characterized by immune suppression and selection of potentially pathogenic bacteria, may lead both to adverse outcomes after surgical treatment and to the overgrowth of multidrug-resistant flora. Nevertheless, the etiologic relationship between intrapancreatic microbiota and postoperative complications in PDAC patients subjected to surgery has not yet been described. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04274972
Study type Observational [Patient Registry]
Source Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Integrata Verona
Contact
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date February 1, 2020
Completion date December 31, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT05435053 - Irreversible Electroporation + Nivolumab for Patients With Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06006390 - CEA Targeting Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Lymphocytes (CAR-T) in the Treatment of CEA Positive Advanced Solid Tumors Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT03109041 - Initial Feasibility Study to Treat Resectable Pancreatic Cancer With a Planar LDR Source Phase 1
Recruiting NCT06065891 - Para-aortic Lymph Node Metastasis in Resectable Pancreatic Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT06010862 - Clinical Study of CEA-targeted CAR-T Therapy for CEA-positive Advanced/Metastatic Malignant Solid Tumors Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05048524 - Peri-operative SLOG for Localized Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Suspended NCT05124743 - HLA Typing & Tumor Neoantigen Identification for Phase I/II Study of Autologous TCR-T Cells in Subjects With Solid Tumors
Recruiting NCT05351983 - Patient-derived Organoids Drug Screen in Pancreatic Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT05679674 - Stereotactic Body Radiation and Tumor Treating Fields for Locally Advanced Pancreas Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT05501379 - Comparison of the Physical Activity in Cancer Patients Assessed by Questionnaire and Motion Tracker
Recruiting NCT04851106 - Evaluation of Endoscopic Ultrasound Shear Wave Elastography (EUS-SWE) for the Diagnosis of Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma.
Enrolling by invitation NCT04466189 - Prospective Cohort Study of Pancreatic Cancer Patients Treated With Proton Beam Therapy
Not yet recruiting NCT06036563 - Prospective Screening and Differentiating Common Cancers Using Peripheral Blood Cell-Free DNA Sequencing
Terminated NCT01313416 - Gemcitabine and CT-011 for Resected Pancreatic Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01411072 - Biomarker Directed Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Resected Pancreas Cancer N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01448668 - Iscador Qu as Supportive Treatment in Pancreatic Cancer (Union for International Cancer Control, UICC Stages II-IV) N/A
Completed NCT01155882 - Registry Study - Whipple at the Splenic Artery
Recruiting NCT04970056 - Pancreatic Cancer Early Detection Consortium
Recruiting NCT04140526 - Safety, PK and Efficacy of ONC-392 in Monotherapy and in Combination of Anti-PD-1 in Advanced Solid Tumors and NSCLC Phase 1/Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT03682744 - CAR-T Intraperitoneal Infusions for CEA-Expressing Adenocarcinoma Peritoneal Metastases or Malignant Ascites (IPC) Phase 1