Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This study aims to evaluate how breast cancer cells metabolise nutrients in order to grow. Patients enrolled into this study will undergo a research biopsy that will aim to collect up to 4 cores of tumour tissue. These tissues will then be used in translational research to analyse how specific pro-tumorigenic events change breast cancer cell metabolism (compared to healthy cell metabolism).
Full description
Comprehensive analysis linking breast tumour subtypes and their genetic profile with tumour metabolism are required. Traditional model systems are inadequate for this purpose.
Metabolic analysis of fresh tissues (by metabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Imaging (MSI)) and tissues grown as patient derived xenograft models in vivo should reveal the unperturbed relationships between genetic profiles of tumour cells, tumour microenvironment and metabolic profiles of tumours. These relationships should provide new targets for metabolism-based therapies. The experimental systems required to perform this research require fresh breast cancer biopsies.
ENSEMBLE is a prospective multi-centre cohort study that aims to address these issues. Fresh breast tumour tissue will be collected from consented female participants diagnosed with invasive breast cancer, for translational research. Up to 240 participants will be enrolled over a 36-month period and clinical follow-up data will be collected for up to 5 years. Study participants will undergo a "research biopsy" (core biopsy) for translational research that aims to collect up to four cores. The procedure is the same as the standard of care percutaneous core needle biopsy that the patient will have to inform their diagnosis, however, as it is an additional procedure, it is called a "research biopsy". Wherever possible biopsy samples will be taken from the operative specimen at the time of primary surgery however, where neo-adjuvant therapy is planned in a patient's care plan, these patients will undergo a research percutaneous biopsy prior to their surgery, performed either using image-guidance or as a clinical biopsy.
Collected tumour material will be divided: a portion will immediately be frozen in liquid nitrogen, and a portion will be kept fresh. The material will be transported to the primary receiving laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute where part of the sample will be immediately engrafted into immune-deficient mice to create a patient-derived xenograft (PDX) model. The remaining primary samples and samples from PDXs will be used for genomic, metabolomic and other biochemical analyses.
Information about participant demographics, medical history and tumour characteristics will be collected at registration. Participants may be followed up for up to 5 years for clinical outcome data and to clarify information about medical history
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
240 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Danni Maas; Mariia Yuneva, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal