Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05640700

Vaginal Microbiome and HPV Pre-malignant and Cervical Dysplasia

Assessing Personalized Vaginal Microbiome Contributions to HPV-driven Pre-malignant and Malignant Cervical Cancer

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hadassah Medical Organization · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
25 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

In this study, the investigators will prospectively collect, analyze and integrate information regarding vaginal microbiome composition and HPV presence in women with cervical pathologies (high-grade CIN and CC) and controls, to construct a large dataset from patients with pre-cancerous cervical lesions and healthy women, to evaluate the personalized contribution of the vaginal microbiome to the CIN-CC sequence.

Detailed description

Infection with high-risk Human Papillomavirus (HPV) genotypes constitutes a well-recognized risk factor for cervical-carcinoma (CC). High-risk HPV features 10-15% persistence rate, consequently driving precancerous cervical-intraepithelial-neoplasia (CIN) and subsequent progression to CC. Multiple factors are believed to play permissive roles in the progression of CIN/CC , yet a molecular mechanism driving carcinogenesis across the CIN-CC continuum following persistent HPV infection remains elusive. The vaginal microbiome may play a role in the development of CIN-CC carcinogenesis, by modulation of host-immune-response and alteration of cervical microenvironment to become tumor-permissive. While suggested vaginal microbiome contributions include induction of altered epithelial cell adhesion and downregulation of DNA damage responses, no clear mechanism has been proven to date. The loss of Lactobacillus genus dominancy, and the switch to dysbiotic, high-diversity, high-pH, Bacterial Vaginosis (BV) is thought to play a key-role in HPV infection, persistence and carcinogenesis. the investigators hypothesize that specific vaginal microorganisms may promote HPV persistence, chronic inflammation and progression through the CIN-CC sequence, and the elimination of harmful bacteria or supplementation of beneficial microbes, could possibly reverse HPV persistency and inhibit CIN-CC progression. The current study consists of recruitment of a human cohort of healthy, CIN and CC patients including vaginal samples and comprehensive metadata collection. The investigators plan to conduct an in-depth characterization of vaginal microbiome to identify associations with HPV, CIN and CC.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-09
Primary completion
2025-12-30
Completion
2025-12-30
First posted
2022-12-07
Last updated
2025-03-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05640700. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.