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ctDNA Liquid Biopsy for Early Assessment of Residual Disease in HPV-associated Head and Neck Cancer (Clear-HPVca)

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Mass Eye and Ear

Status

Completed

Conditions

HPV Positive Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT06730412
18-653
R03DE030550 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to test a new liquid biopsy assay for detecting residual disease after surgery in patients with HPV-associated head and neck cancer.

Full description

Human papillomavirus associated head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HPV+HNC) is the most common HPV-associated cancer in the United States. Surgery is a common approach for primary treatment of early-stage HPV+HNC. Many patients who undergo surgery receive adjuvant radiation or chemoradiation therapy to treat potential residual disease, which is currently predicted based on clinicopathologic risk factors including positive margins, extranodal extension, multiple positive lymph nodes, vascular invasion, and lymphatic invasion. However, there are limitations in predicting residual disease based on the use of these features alone - the use of clinicopathologic risk factors for prediction is non-standardized and has poor individualized predictive and prognostic capacity. Currently, there are no established biomarkers to predict residual disease.

Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is an emerging minimally invasive prognostic biomarker, for detecting molecular residual disease (MRD) and predicting recurrence in multiple solid cancers. Prospective trials in cancers such as colorectal cancer have demonstrated not only strong Disease Free Survival (DFS) prognostic capacity but also Overall Survival (OS). Previous studies have demonstrated that HPV+HNCs release circulating tumor HPV DNA (ctHPVDNA) into the blood where it serves as an accurate real-time biomarker of disease status after surgery. In patients without pathological risk factors, ctHPVDNA is rapidly cleared after surgery. In patients with residual disease, ctHPVDNA remains elevated after surgery. However, initial studies have showed that patients with microscopic levels of residual disease are often not detected by current approaches using droplet digital PCR (ddPCR), suggesting significantly more sensitive assays are necessary.

HPV-DeepSeek is an HPV whole genome next-generation sequencing assay which is significantly more sensitive than ddPCR-based approaches. The investigators aim to conduct a prospective observational cohort study of HPV+HNC patients treated with curative intent surgery to test the primary hypothesis that patients with MRD detection after surgery will have inferior 2-year DFS and OS and the secondary hypothesis that patients with MRD detection after treatment completion (surveillance) will have inferior 2-year DFS and OS.

Enrollment

103 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Greater than or equal to 18 years of age
  • Newly diagnosed, untreated, histologically confirmed HPV-associated head and neck cancer
  • Scheduled for curative intent resection as primary treatment
  • Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status of 0-2

Exclusion criteria

  • Not meeting all inclusion criteria
  • Pregnant
  • Receiving treatment for concurrent second malignancy

Trial design

103 participants in 1 patient group

HPV-associated head and neck cancer patients treated with surgery
Description:
AJCC 8 Stage I-III HPV+ head and neck cancer patients treated with curative intent surgery

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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