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RecruitingNCT07220239

Menstrual Cup for Early Endometrial Cancer Detection in Lynch Syndrome

Menstrual Cup-based Endometrial Collection as an Alternative to Endometrial Biopsy in Lynch Syndrome Patients

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
25 (estimated)
Sponsor
Jessica D. St. Laurent, MD · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Study Goal: This pilot study wants to find out if using a menstrual cup can be a good, non-invasive way to collect samples from the lining of the uterus (called the endometrium) to help screen for endometrial cancer. This is especially important for women who have a higher chance of getting this cancer, such as those with a genetic condition called Lynch syndrome. Main Questions the Study Will Answer: 1. Can a menstrual cup collect enough uterine lining (endometrial tissue) for doctors to examine under a microscope? 2. Are the samples from the menstrual cup as useful for diagnosis as samples taken using the usual method (called an endometrial biopsy or EMB)? 3. Is using a menstrual cup at home easy, effective, and comfortable for participants? 4. Can scientists grow small lab models of the uterus (called organoids) from the menstrual cup samples and from biopsy samples? What Will Happen in the Study: * Participants will use a menstrual cup at home to collect menstrual blood. * They will also have a standard endometrial biopsy done by a healthcare provider. * After both collections, participants will fill out a short survey about how comfortable and easy it was to use the menstrual cup. What the Study Will Measure: * Feasibility: How well participants are able to use the menstrual cup and send in the sample. * Sample Quality: Whether the menstrual cup collects enough good-quality tissue for testing, and how it compares to biopsy samples. * Participant Experience: How women feel about using the menstrual cup, based on the survey. * Lab Testing: Whether researchers can successfully grow endometrial organoids from both types of samples. Why This Study Matters: If this method works, it could offer a gentler, more convenient way for women to get checked for endometrial cancer-especially those who need regular screening. It could also make it easier to collect samples for research and improve early detection of cancer.

Detailed description

Menstrual Cup for Early Endometrial Cancer Detection in Lynch Syndrome (SCREEN-CUP) The study entails two parts that will be conducted one after each other. 1. Pre-pilot study Pre-pilot study including 5 menstruating females who will provide a one-time menstrual cup-based endometrial collection for the generation of organoids and for a pathological evaluation of endometrial specimen from menstrual fluid. After optimizing the study protocol in the pre-pilot study period, the main study will be conducted. 2. Main pilot study Prospective feasibility study including 20 female Lynch syndrome (LS) carriers undergoing annual endometrial biopsy for endometrial cancer surveillance or suspected endometrial pathology will provide a one-time menstrual cup-based endometrial collection and endometrial biopsy specimen. One study aim is to evaluate the comparability and quality of the menstrual cup-based endometrial collection with the EMB sample from the same patient. For the second study aim, endometrial sample collected with the menstrual cup and EMB will be used and compared for organoid generation. Patient satisfaction and feasibility will be monitored through patient and provider questionnaires.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMenstrual cup useMenstrual cup use in menstruating women to collect menstrual fluid with the aim to 1) compare the histology to endometrial biopsy samples from the same patient, to 2) investigate the feasibility and clinical utility of a menstrual cup use as a screening method for endometrial cancer and to 3) generate organoids from the menstrual cup samples

Timeline

Start date
2025-11-20
Primary completion
2026-09-01
Completion
2026-09-01
First posted
2025-10-23
Last updated
2026-03-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07220239. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.