Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01989000

The Role of the Tumor Microenvironment of Pancreatic Cancer to Predict Treatment Outcome

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
47 (actual)
Sponsor
Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA) · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Pancreatic cancer is a highly lethal disease. Patients with resectable or borderline resectable disease may benefit from preoperative radiochemotherapy. However, only a subset of patients will respond to this potentially toxic and expensive treatment. Therefore, novel predictive markers are needed to determine treatment efficacy at an early stage. Preferably, these markers could be determined non-invasively and provide insight into the biology of pancreatic cancer. Pancreatic cancers are heterogeneous tumors. The tumor microenvironment is often characterized by large amounts of stroma, hypovascularization, and hypoxia. As these three factors can all contribute to treatment resistance, a quantitative assessment of these markers may aid in the prediction of response to preoperative radiochemotherapy. Moreover, these assessments may have prognostic value. Finally, further insight into the interrelation of these aspects of the tumor microenvironment can contribute to the evaluation of new targeted treatment options. Tumor cellularity and extracellular matrix composition can be assessed non-invasively in vivo by diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) and tumor vascularity can be assessed by dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI). Finally, tumor hypoxia can be evaluated by T2\* MRI and PET-CT, using the 18F-labeled hypoxic marker HX4. Objective of the study: The primary aim of the study is to assess whether DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT predict overall survival in patients with pancreatic cancer treated with surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy or with neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy, surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. Secondary aims of the study include the assessment of the predictive value of DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT for pathological response to neoadjuvant chemoradiation, the correlation of DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT with histopathological assessment of tumor stroma, vascularization, and hypoxia, and the assessment of the predictive value of these histopathological markers for overall survival.

Detailed description

Background of the study: Pancreatic cancer is a highly lethal disease. Patients with resectable or borderline resectable disease may benefit from preoperative radiochemotherapy. However, only a subset of patients will respond to this potentially toxic and expensive treatment. Therefore, novel predictive markers are needed to determine treatment efficacy at an early stage. Preferably, these markers could be determined non-invasively and provide insight into the biology of pancreatic cancer. Pancreatic cancers are heterogeneous tumors. The tumor microenvironment is often characterized by large amounts of stroma, hypovascularization, and hypoxia. As these three factors can all contribute to treatment resistance, a quantitative assessment of these markers may aid in the prediction of response to preoperative radiochemotherapy. Moreover, these assessments may have prognostic value. Finally, further insight into the interrelation of these aspects of the tumor microenvironment can contribute to the evaluation of new targeted treatment options. Tumor cellularity and extracellular matrix composition can be assessed non-invasively in vivo by diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) and tumor vascularity can be assessed by dynamic contrast enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI). Finally, tumor hypoxia can be evaluated by T2\* MRI and PET-CT, using the 18F-labeled hypoxic marker HX4. Objective of the study: The primary aim of the study is to assess whether DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT predict overall survival in patients with pancreatic cancer treated with surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy or with neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy, surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. Secondary aims of the study include the assessment of the predictive value of DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT for pathological response to neoadjuvant chemoradiation, the correlation of DWI, DCE-MRI, T2\*, and 18F-HX4-PET/CT with histopathological assessment of tumor stroma, vascularization, and hypoxia, and the assessment of the predictive value of these histopathological markers for overall survival. Study design: The target population will be recruited from the the Academic Medical Centre (AMC) and Erasmus MC. First, to assess reproducibility, patients with pancreatic cancer will undergo MRI twice, once in the AMC and once in the EMC. Next, 40 consecutive patients that will undergo surgery+adjuvant treatment will have MRI and 18F-HX4-PET/CT measurements once to assess the value of the techniques to predict outcome of standard treatment. 40 patients who will undergo preoperative radiochemotherapy will have MRI and 18F-HX4-PET/CT at baseline, and 1 week before surgery. We will assess the relative contribution of each imaging method as well as the integrated use of these methods as predictive markers for survival and pathological response to treatment. Tumor tissue from resected patients will be analyzed for markers of tumor vascularization (CD31, VEGF), hypoxia (HIF1alfa, GLUT1, CA9), and stromal activation (smooth muscle actin, markers for Hedgehog pathway activity). Results will be correlated with imaging parameters, as well as patient outcome.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGGadobutrol0.1 ml/kg Gadovist is administered at 5 ml/s followed by a 15 ml saline flush
DRUG[F-18]HX4400 MBq \[F-18\]HX4, is administered in a single intravenous bolus injection, followed by a saline flush.
DRUGGemcitabine1000 mg/m2/dose on day 1 and 8 in 2 cycles of 21 days (three weeks) each, one cycle before and one cycle after radiochemotherapy. During radiotherapy gemcitabine is administered at 1000 mg/m2/dose on day 1, 8 and 15.
RADIATIONRadiotherapyA hypofractionated scheme of 15 fractions of 2.4 Gy in three weeks will be applied, combined with the second course of gemcitabine.
PROCEDUREPancreaticoduodenectomy

Timeline

Start date
2013-11-01
Primary completion
2017-12-01
Completion
2017-12-01
First posted
2013-11-20
Last updated
2018-06-27

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01989000. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.