Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT04000425

Potential Clinical Utilities of Circulating Tumor DNA in Gastric Cancer

Evaluating Potential Clinical Utilities of Circulating Tumor DNA in Gastric Cancer

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
55 (estimated)
Sponsor
Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

This study is designed to evaluate the potential clinical utility of ctDNA in the field of gastric cancer treatment,especially the usage of an indicator of MRD(minimal residual disease) in post radical gastrectomy patients. The primary purpose of this trial is to demonstrate if the postoperative ctDNA analysis could be used as an indicator of MRD or adjuvant chemotherapy response in advanced gastric cancer after radical gastrectomy.The second purpose is to describe the profile of ctDNA in gastric cancer.

Detailed description

Gastric cancer is an important health problem, being the fifth most common cancer and the third leading cause of cancer related death worldwide.Incidence shows clear regional and sex variations-rates are highest in Eastern Asia, Eastern Europe, and South America and lowest in Northern and Southern Africa. In China, gastric cancer accounts for nearly 16% of all malignant tumors and more than 80% of gastric cancer are in advanced stage. Minimal residual disease (MRD) was proposed to describe the remaining tumor cells after treatment with curative intent. For curable gastric cancer, MRD means residential cancer cells after radical gastrectomy which share phenotypic similarity and genetic heritage with the original tumor. Treating MRD can increase the rates of cure had been supported by the experience of using adjuvant therapy for some type of solid tumor (for example, colorectal cancer, breast cancer). The challenge in monitoring the MRD in gastric cancer patients is that there is no very sensitive method. Computed tomography(CT) and blood tumor markers are either difficult to detect peritonial dissemination, the most frequent recurrent pattern in gastric caner or with limited sensitivity and specificity. Tumor-specific DNA mutations detected in the cell-free component of peripheral blood, which is known as circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), in most patients, allow for the noninvasive molecular characterization detection of tumors, including genetic changes that are revealed by the selective pressure of adjuvant therapies. Considering the origin of ctDNA, it can be from different subclones of primary tumor or both primary and metastatic tumors, the ctDNA may overcome the problems caused by tumor heterogeneity. Additionally, the short half-life of ctDNA, about 2 hours, makes ctDNA an ideal dynamic marker of tumor bulk. In summary, the ctDNA is a good candidate to be a new kind of blood tumor marker. The preliminary studies had shown very good prospects in some tumors, including breast caner and colon cancer.But little was known in gastric cancer, so we designed this study to demonstrate the potential clinical utility of ctDNA in the field of gastric cancer treatment, especially the usage of an indicator of MRD in post radical gastrectomy patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
COMBINATION_PRODUCTAVENIO ctDNA surveillance kitAVENIO circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) Analysis Kits is a portfolio of three next-generation sequencing (NGS) liquid biopsy assay kits for oncology research: the AVENIO ctDNA Targeted Kit, Expanded Kit and Surveillance Kit.

Timeline

Start date
2018-12-01
Primary completion
2021-03-01
Completion
2021-05-31
First posted
2019-06-27
Last updated
2019-06-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04000425. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.