Image

Patient Derived Organoids (PDOs) to Observe the Clinical Consistency of Personalized Neoadjuvant Therapy for Resectable Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Patient Derived Organoids (PDOs) to Observe the Clinical Consistency of Personalized Neoadjuvant Therapy for Resectable Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Recruiting
18-75 years
All
Phase N/A

Powered by AI

Overview

Study Title:

Observing Clinical Consistency of Personalized Neoadjuvant Therapy Using Patient-Derived Organoid Models (PDO) in Resectable Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Goal

This study aims to explore whether patient-derived organoid models (PDO)-miniature tumors grown from patients' tissue samples-can accurately predict how individuals respond to personalized pre-surgery treatments (neoadjuvant therapy) for esophageal squamous cell cancer (ESCC). The study will compare results from drug sensitivity tests performed on PDO models with actual clinical outcomes after treatment to assess consistency and potential as a predictive tool.

Main Questions Addressed:

Do PDO models accurately reflect patients' tumor characteristics and response patterns to chemotherapy/immunotherapy combinations? Can PDO drug sensitivity testing reliably predict clinical responses (treatment effectiveness) in patients receiving personalized neoadjuvant therapy?

Study Design:

This observational study will enroll patients diagnosed with resectable ESCC who undergo standard neoadjuvant therapy (chemotherapy +/- immunotherapy) before surgery. No treatments will be assigned by the study-therapy decisions remain in physicians' discretion based on standard care protocols.

Participant Procedures:

Patients will provide tissue samples (via endoscopy) used to grow PDO models and blood samples (optional) to study immune cell interactions with tumors. These samples will enable labs to test drug responses in vitro ("lab-on-a-chip" models) while patients proceed with their standard-of-care treatments and surgeries.

Key Activities:

Lab Work (non-invasive procedures post-endoscopy/surgery):

PDO models grown from tumor tissue samples (culturing process) will mimic patients' tumors in miniature (preserving biological features).

Drug sensitivity testing (chemotherapy agents like paclitaxel, platinum drugs and immunotherapies targeting PD-1/PD-L1 pathways**) will assess how tumors respond (growth inhibition rates).

Immune cell interactions (from blood samples) will model tumor-immune microenvironment responses to treatments (immunotherapy relevance).

Clinical Follow-Up:

Patients will undergo standard-of-care treatments (therapy decisions made independently) and regular monitoring post-treatment (survival follow-up every 3 months, adverse events tracked during therapy, clinical response evaluated per RECIST criteria).

Duration

Study participation involves tissue/blood sample collection (during standard diagnostic procedures) followed by routine clinical care monitoring (treatment duration, post-surgery follow-up). Total study timeline spans March-December 2025 (1 year) with participant recruitment beginning February 2025.

Ethical Considerations:

Participants provide informed consent acknowledging optional blood sample collection (if needed) and understand study aims.

Patient identifiers removed from samples/test results ensuring confidentiality (ethical compliance).

No financial or treatment incentives-participation voluntary (patients retain autonomy) including withdrawal at any time (without affecting clinical care decisions).

Study Significance:

By bridging lab models with real-world treatment responses (PDOs validated against clinical outcomes), this research aims to develop personalized treatment strategies (precision oncology) reducing trial-and-error prescribing patterns (currently observed discrepancies in neo-adjuvant therapy responses among ESCC patients).

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Histologically confirmed esophageal squamous cell carcinoma via endoscopic biopsy.
  • Primary tumor located in the thoracic esophagus (upper third: ≤25 cm from incisors; middle third: 25-30 cm; lower third: ≥30 cm).
  • Clinical staging indicates resectable ESCC based on chest/abdominal enhanced CT, neck lymph node ultrasound, PET-CT/EUS: AJCC/UICC 8th Edition clinical stage excluding T4b, ≥6 lymph node metastases, ≥3 regional lymph node stations involved/metastatic disease (M1).
  • Age: 18-75 years inclusive.
  • ECOG performance status score of 0 or 1, with life expectancy ≥12 months.
  • Adequate organ function: WBC >4.0×10⁹/L, ANC ≥2.0×10⁹/L, platelets >100×10⁹/L, hemoglobin >90g/L; FEV1 ≥1.2L/FVC≥50%/DLCO≥50%; serum bilirubin ≤1.5×ULN; ALT/AST ≤1.5×ULN; SCr ≤120 µmol/L/Ccr ≥60 ml/min.
  • Willingness and ability to provide informed consent, comply with follow-up requirements, and participate actively in drug sensitivity testing using PDO models.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Clinical staging indicates unresectable ESCC: AJCC/UICC stage T4b disease deemed inoperable by two senior thoracic surgeons; ≥6 lymph node metastases estimated clinically/regionally involving ≥3 stations with lymphadenopathy/metastasis detected via imaging (CT/PET/EUS).
  • Currently receiving/was previously treated with chemotherapy/targeted therapy/radiation/or immunotherapy.
  • Histopathologic diagnosis other than ESCC confirmed via biopsy (e.g., adenocarcinoma).
  • History of prior malignancies except for cured cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or basal cell carcinoma limited locally.
  • Autoimmune disease history; ongoing/recurrent corticosteroid/immunosuppressant use.
  • Prior immunotherapy treatment; known allergy to investigational drugs; HIV/HBV(HBeAg)/HCV positivity (serum markers).
  • Active interstitial lung disease/bronchiectasis; uncontrolled hypertension (SBP≥160 mmHg or DBP≥100 mmHg); cardiovascular disorders (e.g., active ischemia, arrhythmias requiring treatment).
  • Pregnancy/lactation; unwillingness to use contraception during study period.
  • Non-compliance with protocol requirements, psychiatric comorbidities affecting consent capacity, or concurrent participation in other clinical trials.
  • Organ transplantation history (autologous bone marrow/stem cell transplant excluded).

Study details
    Esophageal Cancer

NCT07054086

Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital

15 October 2025

Step 1 Get in touch with the nearest study center
We have submitted the contact information you provided to the research team at {{SITE_NAME}}. A copy of the message has been sent to your email for your records.
Would you like to be notified about other trials? Sign up for Patient Notification Services.
Sign up

Send a message

Enter your contact details to connect with study team

Investigator Avatar

Primary Contact

  Other languages supported:

First name*
Last name*
Email*
Phone number*
Other language

FAQs

Learn more about clinical trials

What is a clinical trial?

A clinical trial is a study designed to test specific interventions or treatments' effectiveness and safety, paving the way for new, innovative healthcare solutions.

Why should I take part in a clinical trial?

Participating in a clinical trial provides early access to potentially effective treatments and directly contributes to the healthcare advancements that benefit us all.

How long does a clinical trial take place?

The duration of clinical trials varies. Some trials last weeks, some years, depending on the phase and intention of the trial.

Do I get compensated for taking part in clinical trials?

Compensation varies per trial. Some offer payment or reimbursement for time and travel, while others may not.

How safe are clinical trials?

Clinical trials follow strict ethical guidelines and protocols to safeguard participants' health. They are closely monitored and safety reviewed regularly.
Add a private note
  • abc Select a piece of text.
  • Add notes visible only to you.
  • Send it to people through a passcode protected link.