The PIONEER Initiative: Precision Insights On N-of-1 Ex Vivo Effectiveness Research Based on Individual...
CancerAll Types52 moreThe PIONEER Initiative stands for Precision Insights On N-of-1 Ex vivo Effectiveness Research. The PIONEER Initiative is designed to provide access to functional precision medicine to any cancer patient with any tumor at any medical facility. Tumor tissue is saved at time of biopsy or surgery in multiple formats, including fresh and cryopreserved as a living biospecimen. SpeciCare assists with access to clinical records in order to provide information back to the patient and the patient's clinical care team. The biospecimen tumor tissue is stored in a bio-storage facility and can be shipped anywhere the patient and the clinical team require for further testing. Additionally, the cryopreservation of the biospecimen allows for decisions about testing to be made at a later date. It also facilitates participation in clinical trials. The ability to return research information from this repository back to the patient is the primary end point of the study. The secondary end point is the subjective assessment by the patient and his or her physician as to the potential benefit that this additional information provides over standard of care. Overall the goal of PIONEER is to enable best in class functional precision testing of a patient's tumor tissue to help guide optimal therapy (to date this type of analysis includes organoid drug screening approaches in addition to traditional genomic profiling).
Post-Neoadjuvant Treatment MRI Based AI System to Predict pCR for Rectal Cancer
Rectal CancerIn this study, investigators seek for a better way to identify the potential pathologic complete response (pCR) patients form non-pCR patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC), based on their post-neoadjuvant treatment Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) data. Previously, a post neoadjuvant treatment MRI based radiomics AI model had been constructed and trained. Here, the predictive power of this artificial intelligence system and expert radiologist to identify pCR patients from non-pCR LARC patients will be compared in this prospective, multicenter, back-to-back clinical study
A Trial of Durvalumab (MEDI 4736) in Combination With Extended Neoadjuvant Regimens in Rectal Cancer...
Rectal CancerRectal Adenocarcinoma1 morePRIME-RT is an open label, multi-centre phase II randomised trial with 1:1 allocation between arm A and arm B. The principal research question is whether the addition of durvalumab to FOLFOX chemotherapy and radiation treatment (either SCRT or LCRT) in the neoadjuvant setting for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) improves rates of complete response. The working hypothesis is that the use of radiation and cytotoxic chemotherapy may prime the tumour immune microenvironment for treatment with immune checkpoint blockade. The main trial will commence after completion of a safety run-in which will enrol at least three patients per arm to test the safety and tolerability of the treatment combinations in each.
Neoadjuvant Short-course Radiotherapy Followed by the Combination of Immunotherapy and Chemotherapy...
Locally Advanced Rectal CancerThis is a single arm, open-label, prospective phase II clinical trial to evaluate the combination of neoadjuvant short-course radiotherapy and immunotherapy (PD-1 antibody) for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). A total of 40 patients will be enrolled in this trial to receive 5*5Gy short-course radiotherapy, followed by 4 cycles of CAPOX chemotherapy and PD-1 antibody. Then they will receive the TME surgery and another 4 cycles of CAPOX chemotherapy. There are two cohorts according to the microsatellite instability status: (1) the micro-satellite stable (MSS) cohort(n=32), (2) the MSI-high cohort (n=8). The primary end point is the rate of pathological complete response (pCR). The long-term prognosis and adverse effects will also be evaluated and analyzed.
The MOMENTUM Study: The Multiple Outcome Evaluation of Radiation Therapy Using the MR-Linac Study...
OncologyBreast Cancer36 moreThe Multi-OutcoMe EvaluatioN of radiation Therapy Using the Unity MR-Linac Study (MOMENTUM) is a multi-institutional, international registry facilitating evidenced based implementation of the Unity MR-Linac technology and further technical development of the MR-Linac system with the ultimate purpose to improve patients' survival, local, and regional tumor control and quality of life.
Organ-preserving Management in Patients With Complete or Near-complete Tumour Response After Preoperative...
Rectal NeoplasmsRectal CancerWatch-and-wait strategy in rectal cancer is gaining momentum. There is a large variability in reporting the proportion of patients achieving clinical complete response (cCR) after routinely delivered preoperative radio(chemo)therapy, likely because of patients' selection. This proportion in population-based level is poorly defined. In addition, predictive factors for cCR are also poorly defined. It is known that cCR response is observed often in small tumours. However, cCR proportion in large cancers has not been sufficiently evaluated. For example, even though pathological complete response (pCR) does occur in large fixed cancer, it is unknown whether cCR does also occur because persistent fibrous stroma may mimic residual cancer in all of such cases. This is a prospective observational population-based cohort study on low rectal cancer to answer the question of how often clinical or near-clinical tumour response occur after routinely delivered preoperative radiotherapy in relation to the pre-treatment tumour characteristics. The additional question was how often pCR occur in relation to the pre-treatment tumour characteristics in the patients managed by total mesorectal excision because of persistent tumour after radiotherapy. The additional aim was the implementation of watch-and-wait strategy or full-thickness local excision (as an option instead of total mesorectal excision in the patients with sustained near-cCR) within a frame of a prospective study. In the patients managed by organ preservation, the secondary outcome measures were: i) local regrowth rate, ii) effectiveness of salvage surgery, iii) disease-free survival at 3 years and overall survival at 5 years, iv) anorectal function.
Dasatinib for the Prevention of Oxaliplatin-Induced Neuropathy in Patients With Metastatic Gastrointestinal...
Advanced Colorectal CarcinomaMetastatic Colorectal Carcinoma14 moreThis phase Ib trial studies side effects and best dose of dasatinib in preventing oxaliplatin-induced peripheral neuropathy in patients with gastrointestinal cancers who are receiving FOLFOX regimen with or without bevacizumab. Drugs used in chemotherapy, such as leucovorin, fluorouracil, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX regimen), work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. However, the buildup of oxaliplatin in the cranial nerves can result in damage or the nerves. Dasatinib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Blocking these enzymes may reduce oxaliplatin-induced peripheral neuropathy.
dataBase for Analysis of Rectal Cancer Oncological Results
Rectal CancerMetformin3 moreThe data will be obtained from 10 tertiary centers located in Poland (Cracow - coordinating center, Warsaw - 3 centers, Sosnowiec, Szczecin, Bydgoszcz, Lublin, Gdansk, Poznan) and 5 foreign centers. The analyses will include patients with rectal cancer operated on between 2013-2019. A database in MS Excel is prepared that consists of following data: Type of neoadjuvant treatment (if any) Time-interval between the end of neoadjuvant treatment and surgery Type of surgery Staging of rectal cancer i.e. (y)pTNM Number of retrieved lymph nodes Number of lymph nodes with metastases R classification (R0, R1, R2) Preoperative medications (metformin, statins, NSAIDs, anticoagulants) Recurrence date and type (local, systemic, both diagnosed at the same time) Date of death or date of last follow-up visit The aims of the study are following: Establishing whether neoadjuvant treatment (PSCR or chemoradiotherapy) influences number of retrieved lymph nodes in rectal cancer Establishing whether time-interval between the end of PSCR and surgery influences lymph node yield Establishing the prognostic value of lymph node ratio - validation of the previously calculated cutoff point at the level of 0.41 Determining independent prognostic factors in rectal cancer - in particular related to medications taken before the operation, metformin and anti diabetic drugs in the first place
Development of a Clinical and Biological Database in Rectum Cancer
Rectal NeoplasmsA Clinical and Biological Database will provide to the scientific community a collection of blood and tissues with clinical data to improve knowledge about cancer and help to develope new cancer treatments. This database is specific to Rectum Cancer.
A Combination Therapy Including Anti-PD-1 Immunotherapy in Rectal Cancer With Refractory Distal...
Advanced Rectal CancerDistal MetastasisThough surgical resection remains the primary choice for advanced rectal cancer, about 80% are considered unresectable due to the number, size, or location of metastases. The overall prognosis of patients who accepted traditional treatment methods is still poor. Therefore, the investigators designed a combination therapy, short-course radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy with target therapy and anti-PD-1 immunotherapy. This study implement the combination therapy in patients with rectal cancer who are initially unresectable in the locally advanced stage with multiple liver/pulmonary metastases, to evaluate whether they can improve the objective response rate, the conversion rate of radical surgery and prolong the overall survival of patients, and strive to provide high-level medical evidence for the clinical treatment.