Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02022371
Other study ID # 13/0244
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
First received December 15, 2013
Last updated May 8, 2017
Start date September 2014
Est. completion date June 2016

Study information

Verified date May 2017
Source University College London Hospitals
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to carry out very detailed genetic testing on prostate cancer cells. The reason to do this is because researchers do not fully understand

- How prostate cancer develops

- Why some cancer cells spread and others do not

- Why some cancer cells respond to treatment and others do not

Researchers and doctors know that 1 in 3 of the male population over the age of 50 has cancer cells in their prostate. However, most of these men will never know they have it and it will not affect their quality of life or their life expectancy. However, some cancers can be aggressive. These are more likely to spread outside of the prostate and cause problems. Doctors do not have an accurate way to tell the difference between aggressive cancer and those which will not cause any problems. Even within one prostate some tumours are aggressive and others do not cause a problem during the lifetime of a patient. In fact, even within one tumour, different cells may behave differently. In other words, one part of the tumour may be aggressive and spread, whilst another part of the same tumour does not. This project will try to find out more about what makes different tumours and different parts of the same tumour aggressive or harmless.

It is important to find out what makes some cancer cells spread and others stay where they are. For the investigators to do this they need to collect fresh samples of cancer tissue from the prostate and from different areas of a tumour within the prostate. This is because biopsies used to diagnose or exclude cancer by the hospital laboratory are not good enough to give investigators detailed genetic information. These biopsies have been put into a chemical called formalin which reduces the quality of the genetic information.

Investigators are therefore asking patients who are undergoing prostate biopsies as part of their normal care to allow them to take additional biopsies for the purpose of this study. This may be the first time patients are having biopsies. Or, patients may be having biopsies after treatment that has been given for the cancer and the doctors are concerned the treatment is not working.


Description:

Cancer is a genetic disease, caused by mutations in genes that lead to increased cell proliferation and survival. Importantly, the genetic changes vary dramatically between individual prostate cancer patients and the specific combination of mutations within a patient's cancer is thought to determine tumour aggressiveness and clinical outcome.

Personalized medicine approaches aim to decipher the genetic code of a patient's tumour in order to identify cancers which will behave aggressively and need treatment. However, extensive intra-tumour heterogeneity (ITH) has been discovered in several solid tumour types, complicating the identification of the relevant genetic changes as they may not be present throughout the entire tumour and are likely to be missed by tumour biopsies. ITH is thus a major hurdle for the implementation of personalized cancer treatment approaches.

Investigators have developed genetic technologies that allow them to measure ITH in solid tumours and they now want to apply these to patients with prostate cancer to define the extent and the clinical importance of ITH in this disease which is currently unknown. This will involve looking at the control of genes in the cancer cells which make some tumours more aggressive than others. This may help in predicting which tumours are important and need to be targeted and those that could be left so that too much tissue damage does not occur as a result of therapy. Finding out why some cancer cells spread and others do not may also help to identify novel molecular targets that could be used to prevent the development of metastases.

Patients with suspected prostate cancer usually have scans and then prostate biopsies. These biopsies are needed by the pathologist to make a proper diagnosis and cannot be used for full genetic analysis. So, investigators will ask patients whether they would be willing to give some extra samples of tissue while undergoing these routine biopsies.

Defining ITH in prostate cancer will provide important insights into the genetics of prostate cancer development and metastatic progression and is a key prerequisite for the development of reliable personalized cancer medicine approaches. Thus this study will significantly advance researchers' efforts to predict which tumours are dangerous and in need of urgent treatment and those that could safely be left untreated which would spare these patients the unnecessary side effects. Investigators think that this research work will have a major impact on the use of next generation sequencing in the management of prostate cancer through an in-depth understanding of how common are differences between and within individual cancer lesions. Investigators also want to find out whether these differences, if they exist, are important in tumour development and spread to other areas. Investigators think that the characterization of these differences will allow them to successfully use this information to group patients undergoing treatment using molecular 'signatures' so that treatment is targeted rather than applied in a 'sledge-hammer' approach. Investigators believe that without studies like PROGENY, doctors will instead rely on data from single tumour biopsies which can be misleading since single biopsies may not have sampled the most aggressive tumour area. Finally, investigators think that PROGENY will reveal how prostate cancers evolve over time and which of these changes lead to metastases and ultimately kill the patient. These are called phylogenetic studies and will help work out the main (or 'trunk') genomic changes from later events in 'branches'. This may allow researchers to focus their drug discovery efforts on the common 'trunk' genomic changes.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 50
Est. completion date June 2016
Est. primary completion date June 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Male
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Treatment naïve group

1. Men with no prior diagnosis of prostate cancer undergoing prostate biopsy based on identified lesions on imaging

2. Men with a raised PSA above 15ng/ml

3. Men giving informed consent

Treated men

1. Men undergoing tissue biopsy for suspicion of prostate cancer recurrence following previous local or systemic therapy based on identified lesions in multi-parametric MRI, bone-scan, choline PET/CT, or PET/MRI

Exclusion Criteria:

- 1. Unable to have MRI scan or CT scan, or in whom artefact would reduce scan quality

2. Unable to have prostate biopsy

3. Unable to undergo biopsy for metastatic evaluation

4. On immunosuppression or predefined immunosuppressed state

5. A coagulopathy predisposing to bleeding

6. Unable to give informed consent

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
Targeted biopsies of the prostate
Multiple biopsies from a MRI lesion for analysis of intratumour heterogeneity

Locations

Country Name City State
United Kingdom University College London Hospitals London

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University College London Hospitals

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United Kingdom, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Tumour heterogeneity To define the extent of inter/intra-tumour heterogeneity and its association with disease stage at diagnosis and Gleason grade by deep genomic sequencing of multiple regions of intermediate Gleason grade tumours and high Gleason grade tumours, with and without metastatic disease. At time of biopsy
Primary Clonal origin of secondary tumours Through clonal re-ordering and multi-regional prostate mapping, determine whether satellite tumour nodules in high grade prostate cancers represent monoclonal disease related to the index lesion or the evolution of polyclonal cancers by evaluating the deep genomic signatures of primary and secondary lesions within the prostate At time of biopsy
Primary Relationship of tumours to metastases Identify genotype requirements for metastasis development by deep sequencing DNA from the associated metastases from the same patient to reconstruct clonal evolution from primary tumour to metastatic sites and identify evolutionary bottlenecks governing metastasis development that may be targetable for clinical benefit. At time of biopsy
Secondary Identifying genomic signature of tumour DNA in blood To determine whether ultra-deep sequencing of circulating plasma DNA can reconstruct inter/intra-tumour heterogeneity and clonal evolution occurring in men who have failed first- and second-line therapies (for localized and metastatic disease). At time of biopsy
Secondary Genomic signature changes in tumour DNA in blood when drug resistance develops To determine whether ultra-deep sequencing of circulating plasma DNA can reconstruct inter/intra-tumour heterogeneity and clonal evolution occurring during the acquisition of castration resistant disease. At time of biopsy
Secondary Relationship of tumour genomics with imaging To determine the association of inter/intra-tumour heterogeneity with functional imaging with multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging At time of biopsy
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05613023 - A Trial of 5 Fraction Prostate SBRT Versus 5 Fraction Prostate and Pelvic Nodal SBRT Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05540392 - An Acupuncture Study for Prostate Cancer Survivors With Urinary Issues Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05156424 - A Comparison of Aerobic and Resistance Exercise to Counteract Treatment Side Effects in Men With Prostate Cancer Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT03177759 - Living With Prostate Cancer (LPC)
Completed NCT01331083 - A Phase II Study of PX-866 in Patients With Recurrent or Metastatic Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05540782 - A Study of Cognitive Health in Survivors of Prostate Cancer
Active, not recruiting NCT04742361 - Efficacy of [18F]PSMA-1007 PET/CT in Patients With Biochemial Recurrent Prostate Cancer Phase 3
Completed NCT04400656 - PROState Pathway Embedded Comparative Trial
Completed NCT02282644 - Individual Phenotype Analysis in Patients With Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer With CellSearch® and Flow Cytometry N/A
Recruiting NCT06305832 - Salvage Radiotherapy Combined With Androgen Deprivation Therapy (ADT) With or Without Rezvilutamide in the Treatment of Biochemical Recurrence After Radical Prostatectomy for Prostate Cancer Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06037954 - A Study of Mental Health Care in People With Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT05761093 - Patient and Physician Benefit/ Risk Preferences for Treatment of mPC in Hong Kong: a Discrete Choice Experiment
Completed NCT04838626 - Study of Diagnostic Performance of [18F]CTT1057 for PSMA-positive Tumors Detection Phase 2/Phase 3
Recruiting NCT03101176 - Multiparametric Ultrasound Imaging in Prostate Cancer N/A
Completed NCT03290417 - Correlative Analysis of the Genomics of Vitamin D and Omega-3 Fatty Acid Intake in Prostate Cancer N/A
Completed NCT00341939 - Retrospective Analysis of a Drug-Metabolizing Genotype in Cancer Patients and Correlation With Pharmacokinetic and Pharmacodynamics Data
Completed NCT01497925 - Ph 1 Trial of ADI-PEG 20 Plus Docetaxel in Solid Tumors With Emphasis on Prostate Cancer and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03679819 - Single-center Trial for the Validation of High-resolution Transrectal Ultrasound (Exact Imaging Scanner ExactVu) for the Detection of Prostate Cancer
Completed NCT03554317 - COMbination of Bipolar Androgen Therapy and Nivolumab Phase 2
Completed NCT03271502 - Effect of Anesthesia on Optic Nerve Sheath Diameter in Patients Undergoing Robot-assisted Laparoscopic Prostatectomy N/A