Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
It is a single-center, prospective, observational, non-randomized study of newly diagnosed oligodendroglioma patients conducted in a tertiary hospital. The investigators conduct an eight-year follow-up, including patients' psychological stress, immune biomarker changes, quality of life, and disease progression of patients towards secondary glioma after the first definite diagnosis. In the first year after diagnosis, patients are followed up four times at 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months. After that, patients are followed up semiannually.
The study had two cohorts, a high-stress cohort and a low-stress cohort, which are grouped after initial recruitment. Both groups undergo total resection of tumors and received 3 months of standardized treatment with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Neither participants nor doctors but the researcher can choose which group participants are in. No one knows if one study group is better or worse than the other.
Full description
Oligodendroglioma belongs to the class of gliomas that represent the most common class of primary malignant human brain tumors in adulthood. After tumor resection, patients still face the possibility of recurrence and even progression to glioblastoma. The immune microenvironment is most likely contributing to their development, but underlying pathomechanisms are only partly understood.
The high-level psychological stress can lead to a change in malignant tumors patients' neuroendocrine pathways and correlates with the prognosis outcome. In addition, psychological stress can lead to changes in the immune microenvironment, but if it leads to disease progression in oligodendroglioma towards secondary glioma has not been adequately demonstrated.
Grouping process: 60 patients are expected to be enrolled. After enrollment, participants will receive regular tumor in situ fluid (fluid within the surgical cavity, TISF) sampling for tumor mutation burden (TMB) analysis and regular MRI. Under the standard of care, participants will receive psychological stress assessment after being diagnosed. according to five psychological scales, and the patients were grouped according to the cut-off value of each scale, the psychological stress of the patients is measured by distress thermometer (DT), perceived stress scale (PSS), anxiety/depression (HADS), and fear of disease progression scale (PoP-Q-SF).
Primary study objectives:
Secondary study objectives:
Exploratory objectives:
-To evaluate the effect of managing the patient's psychological stress on the patient's immune microenvironment.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
60 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Xingyao Bu; Jie Mei
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal