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Immunophenotyping of Metastases From Colorectal Cancer

I

Istituto Oncologico Veneto IRCCS

Status

Completed

Conditions

Metastatic Colorectal Cancer

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03604926
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Details and patient eligibility

About

Immune therapy represents a promising option for the treatment of an increasing number of malignancies. New immunotherapeutic strategies are currently under development and will be further studied starting from refractory settings of heavily pre-treated mCRC patients. On this basis, a specific immunological characterization of CRC metastasis will be relevant to direct future clinical and pharmacological research.

As surgery is a therapeutic option in the treatment of mCRC, a percentage of mCRC patients undergo to resection of metastasis before or after medical treatment. These tumour samples could be useful to define the immune signature of colorectal metastatic disease.

On the basis of the above reported considerations, an exploratory, prospective, observational study for the immunophenotypical characterization of colorectal cancer metastasis from pre-treated vs chemo-naive patients has been planned.

Full description

  • There is extensive evidence for molecular heterogeneity in CRC. Studies have revealed that intra-tumour heterogeneity can be highly variable within primary tumours or between primary and metastatic sites (1). Moreover, tumour heterogeneity can be linked to targeted therapies in terms of acquired resistance mutations (2). In the era of precision medicine, specific molecular characterization of primary tumour and metastasis taking into account the dynamism of the disease and the actual therapeutic target should be considered.
  • Nowadays there is not enough information regarding the immunological characterization of CRC metastasis. Especially, few data are available about the effect of chemotherapy and targeted drugs on the interplay between tumour and the immune system of the host (3).
  • Immune system takes part to different phases of tumour growth (4). It is a dynamic balance that can be differentially modulated by several agents, resulting in immunosuppression or immunostimulation. Becht et al. integrated the molecular classification of colorectal cancer with information about their immune microenvironment. They identified 2 "immune-high subgroups". The MSI-rich CMS1 group is characterized by an immune stimulating contexture while the mesenchymal CMS4 group has an immune suppressive microenvironment (5). No data regarding the evolution over time of these features are available so far.
  • Immune therapy represents a promising option for the treatment of an increasing number of malignancies. New immunotherapeutic strategies are currently under development and will be further studied starting from refractory settings of heavily pre-treated mCRC patients. On this basis, a specific immunological characterization of CRC metastasis will be relevant to direct future clinical and pharmacological research.
  • As surgery is a therapeutic option in the treatment of mCRC, a percentage of mCRC patients undergo to resection of metastasis before or after medical treatment. These tumour samples could be useful to define the immune signature of colorectal metastatic disease.

On the basis of the above reported considerations, an exploratory, prospective, observational study is planned for the immunophenotypical characterization of colorectal cancer metastasis from pre-treated vs chemo-naive patients.

Enrollment

10 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Histological diagnosis of colorectal cancer
  • Metastatic disease
  • Surgery for metastatic disease
  • Availability of clinical data

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-metastatic disease

Trial design

10 participants in 2 patient groups

chemo-naive patients
pre-treated patients with systemic chemotherapy +/- a targeted

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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