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Trial Title:
ORganoid GeneratioN Study for Cancer
NCT ID:
NCT05734963
Condition:
Cancer
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Prospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Genetic
Intervention name:
DNA sequencing, RNA gene expression analysis, molecular profiling
Description:
Growth of organoids from tissue samples, collection of tissue, blood and saliva samples
for DNA sequencing, RNA gene expression analysis, molecular profiling
Arm group label:
Group 1
Summary:
ORIGINS - a multi-site sample collection study to establish patient-derived pre-clinical
models for cancers
Detailed description:
People who develop cancer can often be cured if they are suitable for surgery or
radiotherapy. However, a proportion of these cancers return, at which point the available
treatment options are often not very effective. Our understanding of the biology of many
cancers is limited, and we don't understand why some cancers are cured by surgery or
radiotherapy and some are not. A better understanding of the biology of cancers could
help develop new treatments, or improvements to current treatments, and this might
increase the number of patients who can be cured of their disease.
One way to improve the understanding we have of the biology is to look in detail at
cancer samples taken from the from patients. The problem with this is that often samples
are small, and the tumour tissue sample itself already dead once removed from where it
was growing, which can limit the analyses that are possible. A potential solution for
this is to take cancer tissue from patients and try to directly grow the cells in the
laboratory. Keeping the cancer cells alive in the laboratory can be difficult but has
been shown to be possible in a number of different types of cancer. This kind of model is
sometimes known as an "organoid". If successfully established, it means more tests can be
done to find out how the cancer is working.
This study is looking at collecting samples of a person's cancer to see if we can develop
these models from patients being treated for different cancers. We will ask people who
are having surgery for cancer whether we can take samples from their tumour to try and
achieve this. Some additional blood tests will be taken alongside the usual blood tests
before and after surgery, without an additional blood draw, and before and again after
any adjuvant therapy is completed. A collection of saliva will also be requested at these
times and we will ask people whether they are happy for us to collect any previous tissue
samples, or nay that are subsequently collected when they are being followed up, to allow
comparison with the samples collected as part of this study.
The main goal of this study is to see if organoids can be established in our
laboratories. If these models are successfully established, we will compare them to the
original tumour to check they are a good match biologically. After this we can use them
to understand how the cancer works and try out new treatments.
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
Patients with histologically proven or suspected cancer undergoing an interventional
procedure, such as surgery or biopsy
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age 18 years or older
- Patients with histologically proven or suspected cancer undergoing an interventional
procedure, such as surgery or biopsy
- Ability to give informed consent for biological sample collection
Exclusion Criteria:
- Unable to undergo sample collection
- Pregnancy
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
The Royal Marsden Hospital
Address:
City:
London
Country:
United Kingdom
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Ben O'Leary
Phone:
02071535337
Email:
ben.oleary@icr.ac.uk
Start date:
April 4, 2022
Completion date:
April 12, 2031
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05734963