2024-11
2027-01
2027-02
60
NCT06666803
IHU Strasbourg
IHU Strasbourg
INTERVENTIONAL
Functional, Personalised and Integrated Profiling of Biopsied Pancreatic Tumours (CancerProfile by FNB)
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) has the poorest prognosis of all digestive cancers due to lack of early diagnosis and limited response to treatment. Patient-derived organoid technology has become a mainstay of precision oncology, enabling personalised functional characterisation of tumours (e.g. treatment evaluation and drug screening). Initial research carried out as part of the Cancer Profile project has produced the first organoids from resected PDAC parts. Only 15-20% of patients can benefit from surgical resection, which remains the only curative treatment. In contrast, most patients with PDAC undergo diagnostic fine-needle biopsies (FNB) using an echo-endoscopic procedure (EUS). The next step is therefore the reliable generation of organoids from limited quantities of biopsy material obtained by 'EUS-FNB'. The aim of the study presented here is to validate these organoids on the basis of the following characteristics: (i) morphological and proliferative characteristics, (ii) recapitulation of the genetic characteristics of the original tumour, (iii) expression of tumour markers.
Pancreatic Ductal AdenoCarcinoma (PDAC) has the poorest prognosis of all digestive cancers due to lack of early diagnosis and limited response to treatment. Its mortality rate is expected to increase in Western countries as populations age and obesity levels rise. Its diagnosis is generally made late in the course of the disease and only 15-20% of patients can benefit from surgical resection, which remains the only curative treatment. Thus, palliative chemotherapy remains a mainstay of the management of this disease. Despite the new approach to treating advanced cancers using molecular characterisation of tumour tissue, only a small subset of patients has access to this personalised treatment and around 13% of patients show a significant response. Patient-derived organoid (PDO) technology enables personalised functional characterisation of tumours (e.g. treatment evaluation and drug screening). PDO are created from adult tumour-derived stem cells and self-organise into structures similar to the corresponding tissue architecture in vivo. In pancreatic cancer, PDO have recapitulated the histology and genetic alterations of the original tumour and have been proved reliable in predicting sensitivities to a range of therapeutic compounds. While the majority of PDAC organoids described have been created from surgical resections, only a few examples of PDAC organoids successfully generated from biopsies have been reported. Given that most PDAC patients are not eligible for surgical resection and therefore undergo diagnostic fine-needle biopsies (FNB) by endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) (EUS-FNB), efforts are needed to improve the generation of PDAC organoids from limited quantities of material. This will ensure that as many PDAC patients as possible can benefit from large-scale drug screening, a technic able to validate gene-drug associations, guide treatment decision-making and known to be well-suited to PDO. The Cancer Profile project is a European collaboration between the IHU Strasbourg and the LIH, funded respectively by the ANR (Agence Nationale de la Recherche, France) and the FNR (Fonds National de la Recherche, Luxembourg). Its ultimate aim is to be able to profile each tumour sample accurately, in an automated and personalised way. A first trial has enabled the establishment of the technique and conditions for culturing spheroids of pancreatic origin. The study proposed here is the next step in this project: the reliable generation of organoids from limited quantities of biopsy material obtained by EUS-FNB. This routine procedure is mandatory in the PDAC standard care to obtain tumour tissue for minimally invasive diagnosis and preoperative procedures such as preoperative chemotherapy. In this clinical study, one to two biopsies will be devoted to the usual analysis performed as part of the care, and a supplementary biopsy will be added for the protocol. This biopsy will be divided in three parts: (i) a sample will be send for organoid culture, (ii) a sample will be preserved in liquid nitrogen and analysed later to check whether the mutations observed in the organoid are indeed identical to those present in the initial tissue, (iii) and a third sample will be analysed by Dynamic Full-field Optical coherence tomography (D-FF-OCT), an innovative technique for imaging living tissue. A blood sample will also be withdrawn for genomic analysis. Once the first organoids are obtained, they will be validated on the basis of the following characteristics: (i) morphological and proliferative characteristics, (ii) genetic characteristics, and (iii) expression of tumour markers.
These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.
Study Registration Dates | Results Reporting Dates | Study Record Updates |
---|---|---|
2024-10-23 | N/A | 2024-10-29 |
2024-10-29 | N/A | 2024-10-31 |
2024-10-31 | N/A | 2024-10 |
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
Primary Purpose:
Basic Science
Allocation:
Na
Interventional Model:
Single Group
Masking:
None
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group/Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
---|---|
EXPERIMENTAL: FNB and blood sample analysis | OTHER: FNB sampling
BIOLOGICAL: blood sampling
|
Primary Outcome Measures | Measure Description | Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Organoid culture from PDAC EUS-FNB biopsy | Qualitative assessment in the obtention of organoids. The main objective will be validated when a culture of functional organoids is generated. | 8 weeks |
Secondary Outcome Measures | Measure Description | Time Frame |
---|---|---|
Evaluation of the protocol for culturing organoids derived from PDAC EUS-FNB biopsies. | Evaluation of the mutations found in the organoid from the EUS-FNB biopsies compared to those in the original sample preserved in liquid nitrogen (qualitative criterion). | 3 months |
Evaluation of the protocol for culturing organoids derived from PDAC EUS-FNB biopsies. | Evaluation of the mutations observed in the cancerous tissue (snap-frozen sample) compared to those observed in the blood sample from the same patient. | 3 months |
Assessment of the overall accuracy of characterising PDAC EUS-FNB samples by optical slicing based on dynamic full-field optical coherence tomography (D-FF-OCT) | Number of EUS-FNB tumour samples confirmed by D-FF-OCT, compared with the total number of samples taken. | Day 1 |
This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.
Study Contact Name: Armelle TAKEDA Phone Number: +33390413608 Email: armelle.takeda@ihu-strasbourg.eu |
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person’s general health condition or prior treatments.
Ages Eligible for Study:
ALL
Sexes Eligible for Study:
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.
The person responsible for entering information about the study voluntarily provides these publications. These may be about anything related to the study.
General Publications
No publications available
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The information and services provided by the National Pancreatic Cancer Foundation are for informational purposes only. The information and services are not intended to be substitutes for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. The National Pancreatic Cancer Foundation does not recommend nor endorse any specific physicians, products or treatments even though they may be mentioned on this site.