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Clinical Utility of Selected Circulating Tumor DNA Assays in Patients With Advanced Malignancy

Clinical Utility of Selected Circulating Tumor DNA Assays in Patients With Advanced Malignancy

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Circulating tumor DNA assays are becoming relevant for routine diagnostics, but many related aspects are yet unresolved. With this project, the investigators aim to develop pragmatic molecular diagnostic pathways of liquid biopsies relevant in advanced gastrointestinal malignancies with focus on clinical utility and sensible use of resources. They want to evaluate the ctDNA assays on a fully automated "low-cost" multiplex platform which is already implemented in routine molecular diagnostics of solid biopsies. The project will evaluate to what extent these ctDNA assays are relevant for clinical decision-making.

Description

Advanced pancreatic cancer (PDAC) and cholangiocarcinoma (CCA): -Could the Idylla ctKRAS test select the ~10% of PDAC patients with KRASwt eligible for more extensive diagnostics? In PDAC and CCA, is it possible to detect patient samples with KRAS G12C or BRAF mutation for study inclusion? Could the ΔCq-value of the tests be used as a semi-quantitative tumor marker? What is the clinical value compared to the current tumor marker CA19-9?

Metastatic Colorectal Cancer: Are the ctDNA assays useful in detecting primary resistance and/or monitoring for secondary/acquired resistance to EGFR antibody treatment? How does the sensitivity, specificity and turnaround time of the ctDNA assays compare to tissue-based analysis? Could the Idylla ctDNA assays accelerate detection of KRAS G12C or BRAF mutations, and hence facilitate study inclusion in the first line setting? Could the ctDNA assays guide rechallenge with EGFR treatment?

Can the information of liver metastases or prognostic markers (s-CEA, s-CRP) guide timing of ctDNA sampling?

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

        Newly referred patients with advanced pancreatic cancer (~20/year), Cholangiocarcinoma
        (~20/year), metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) (~50/year) and anti-EGFR-treated mCRC
        patients (~10/year) to Oslo University Hospital are eligible for inclusion.

Study details
    Metastatic Colorectal Cancer
    Pancreas Adenocarcinoma
    Cholangiocarcinoma

NCT06290856

Oslo University Hospital

21 March 2024

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