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Trans-RosaLEE Study: a Biomarker-directed, Translational Study

Trans-RosaLEE Study: a Biomarker-directed, Translational Study

Recruiting
18 years and older
Female
Phase N/A

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Overview

Hormone receptor (HR)-positive and HER2-negative (HR+/HER2-) metastatic/advanced breast cancer (mBC) is a major public health issue. During the last decades, a therapeutic challenge was to overcome the tumor's resistance to endocrine therapy (ET). Thanks to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms of this resistance, effective new treatments have been developed, such as Kisqali® (ribociclib), a molecularly targeted therapy. This treatment blocks the growth and division of cancer cells by blocking proteins called CDK4/6 located inside the cell. This treatment, taken in combination with ET, blocks the harmful effect of hormones (estrogen) on cancer cell proliferation, and represent the standard first-line treatment of patients with HR+/HER2- mBC.

But, as with any treatment, it is expected that some patients will have a good response and their disease will be stabilized or even in remission, while other patients will not benefit from treatment and will relapse. In order to make progress, it is necessary to identify pre-therapeutic markers predictive of response to this treatment and the molecular mechanisms of this resistance set up by the tumor before or under the effect of the treatment.

The Trans-RosaLEE study aims to fill this gap by providing high-throughput molecular profiling (DNA and RNA) of a collection of tumor and blood samples from patients with RH+/HER2- mBC scheduled to start treatment with Kisqali® + ET. Samples will be collected just prior to initiation of therapy (pre-therapy) and just after discontinuation of therapy in the event of disease progression (post-therapy).

The main objectives of the TransRosaLEE study are :

  • to determine if Kisqali® + ET treatment causes changes in the DNA and/or RNA genes of tumor;
  • to identify whether there is a molecular signature that would predict clinical outcome of patients treated with Kisqali® + ET (tumor response, survival);
  • to identify alterations in tumor's genes that could be targeted by a specific treatment and that would allow, in case of progression of the disease, to set up a new adapted treatment.

The TransRosaLEE study is a collaborative study between the Paoli-Calmettes Institute (France, Marseille) and the pharmaceutical group Novartis. It will take place in up to 90 healthcare institutions in France, and 241 patients will be enrolled. It is closely linked to the non-interventional study RosaLEE promoted by Novartis.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients included in the RosaLEE study.
  2. Patients having read and signed the ICF relative to Trans-RosaLEE.
  3. Tumour material: primary and/or metastatic tumour sample, either available as frozen and collected within 3 months before V0, or newly collected before ribociclib + ET treatment initiation.

    Brain metastases and non-osteolytic bone metastases will be considered as non-collectable/biopsable.

  4. Patient affiliated to the national "Social Security" regimen or beneficiary of this regimen.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Not enrolled in RosaLEE.
  2. Brain metastasis and non-osteolytic bone metastases as only metastatic sites, if no available frozen tumour sample already collected within 3 months before V0.
  3. Tumour material not collected before ribociclib + ET initiation.
  4. Person subject to a legal protection measure (adult under guardianship, curatorship or safeguard of justice), or unable to give their consent.

Study details
    Advanced or Metastatic Breast Cancer (BC)

NCT05529862

Institut Paoli-Calmettes

27 January 2024

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