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Comparison of Different Methods to Test MGMT Status in Glioblastoma Patients (ECOM)

C

Center Eugene Marquis

Status

Completed

Conditions

Glioblastoma

Treatments

Drug: Temozolomide
Radiation: Radiation Therapy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01345370
ECOM-Glioblastome

Details and patient eligibility

About

Treatment for newly diagnosed glioblastomas currently involves surgical resection followed by Temozolomide chemotherapy with concomitant radiotherapy, and then 6 cycles of Temozolomide in adjuvant. According to many studies, only those patients not expressing the enzyme repair MGMT benefit from the adjunction of Temozolomide. Therefore, many patients receive unnecessary treatment. The aim of this project is to compare different techniques for analysis of MGMT in order to choose the approach with the best cost/utility ratio, which will allow the selection of patients likely to respond to TMZ chemotherapy during the first course of GBM treatment.

Full description

Treatment for newly diagnosed glioblastomas (GBM) currently involves surgical resection followed by Temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy with concomitant radiotherapy, and then 6 cycles of TMZ in adjuvant (Stupp schedule). According to many studies, only those patients not expressing the enzyme repair MGMT benefit from the adjunction of TMZ. Therefore, many patients receive unnecessary treatment at an average cost of about 15,000 euros.

The aim of this project is to compare different techniques for analysis of MGMT in order to choose the approach with the best cost/utility ratio, which will allow the selection of patients likely to respond to TMZ chemotherapy during the first course of GBM treatment. Another aspect of this project is to evaluate the extra cost produced by TMZ treatment, and therefore the expected cost saving in the case of using a reliable predictive factor. This kind of evaluation is of great importance, as the MGMT test status is beginning to appear in the decisional care trees of high-grade gliomas The two main techniques for MGMT analysis are currently immunohistochemistry (IH) and molecular analysis of promoter methylation of the gene. Immunohistochemistry is simple and quick, but there is no consensus about labelling or evaluation of the staining, all of which could lead to variability in results. Studies of promoter methylation are currently performed by the MS-PCR technique, in particular the article published in the N Engl J Med in 2005 showing that only patients with a methylated promoter benefit from TMZ adjunction. This technique appears somewhat rudimentary compared to techniques avoiding subjectivity linked to eye reading of the gel after electrophoresis of PCR products.

In phase one of this multicenter national study, IH, MS-PCR, MethyLight, pyrosequencing and MS-HRM will be compared in a retrospective study on 100 samples (frozen for molecular analysis and paraffin-embedded for IH), taken from patients treated according to the Stupp protocol and with a follow-up of 18 months at least. In phase 2, the two techniques with the best cost/efficacy ratio (based on predictive value, analytical quality and feasibility of the test) will be implemented in all the laboratories according to a standard protocol developed by the referral centre for the tests. The dissemination of quality controls will allow us to check that the same results are obtained from one laboratory to another. In phase 3, samples will be analysed prospectively in the different centres and a medico-economic analysis will be undertaken on the integration of MGMT analysis into the standard care of GBM patients. Two types of analysis will be performed: i) on the costs of the techniques, allowing us in particular to estimate the possible additional clinical cost generated and its effect on the cost of a hospital stay, in order to adjust the charging system, and ii) on alternative care strategies for the patients, with or without screening, leading to improve the target of treatments by TMZ, with the aim of improving the definition of "options and recommendations" (cost-utility analysis).

Enrollment

300 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult, age from 18 to 70
  • Pre-surgical diagnosis compatible with a primary or secondary sub-tentorial glioblastoma than can be resected
  • No counter-indication to an adjuvant treatment according to the Stupp schedule
  • Free written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Absence of tumor sample available
  • Definite histology not related to a glioblastoma or a main oligodendroglioma component

Trial design

300 participants in 1 patient group

Stupp protocole
Description:
All subjects enrolled must be treated according to the Stupp schedule : surgical resection followed by Temozolomide (TMZ) chemotherapy with concomitant radiotherapy, and then 6 cycles of adjuvant Temzolomide.
Treatment:
Radiation: Radiation Therapy
Drug: Temozolomide

Trial contacts and locations

10

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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