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The goal of this prospective observational study is to evaluate the presence of circulating tumoral cells in patients over 18 with a stage I-III resectable Merkel cell carcinoma after the initial therapeutic sequence of surgery and radiotherapy. The main question it aims to answer is :
Can any residual disease be found in the form of circulating tumoral cells in blood samples of patients treated with surgery and radiotherapy for a resectable, stage I to III Merkel cell carcinoma ? When possible, the circulating tumoral cells count will be compared to the one realized in a blood sample of the same patient before surgery and radiotherapy.
Participants will :
Full description
The main goal of this study is to evaluate the presence of circulating tumoral cells in patients circulating tumoral cells after surgery and radiotherapy in patients with stage I to III Merkel cell carcinoma.
Another goal will be to track changes in the number of circulating tumoral cells before and after treatment in patients with stage I to III Merkel cell carcinoma, who have had a blood sample taken before starting treatment.
Investigators will also set up a biobank, which is a collection of blood samples taken every six months for one year. These samples will help with future research.
The study will include patients over 18 years old with stage I to III Merkel cell carcinoma, treated at the Dermatology Departments of Montpellier and Nimes University Hospitals. Investigators will not include pregnant or breastfeeding women, patients not covered by social security, those under court protection, those unable to give consent, or those with stage IV Merkel cell carcinoma or stage I to III Merkel cell carcinoma where complete remission is not possible. All patients will give free and informed consent to participate.
Patients will be divided into two groups based on when they are referred to the university hospital for treatment.
Group A: If the tumor is fully removed before the patient is referred to the hospital.
Group B: If the tumor is still present when referred to the hospital. This can happen if:
Both groups will have follow-up visits at 6 and 12 months. The main endpoint will be the circulating tumoral cell detection rate, which is the presence of circulating tumoral cells in their blood right after surgery and radiotherapy. Another measure will be the change in the number of circulating tumoral cells before and after treatment for those who had a blood sample taken before starting treatment.
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25 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Olivier Dereure, Pr; Angele Lallement, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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