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Liquid Biopsy for Early DiagNosis of Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the HeAd and NeCk rEgion (ENHANCE)

R

Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05645783
CCR5610

Details and patient eligibility

About

The 5-year survival for Head and Neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) across all TNM stage groups is approximately 50%. Patients who are present with stage I & II disease have significantly better survival. When a patient presents to their general practitioner (GP) with symptoms suggestive of HNSCC, they may be referred for urgent specialist input through the suspected cancer referral (SCR) pathway, which include dedicated neck lump clinics. HNSCC is known to shed fragments of DNA, called circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) into the bloodstream. The investigators have developed novel ultra-sensitive (>90% sensitivity) next generation sequencing (NGS) assay for circulating HPV DNA in patients with non-metastatic locally advanced head and neck cancer. The use of ultra-sensitive NGS assay for detection of ctDNA using a simple blood test (liquid biopsy) holds a great promise for cancer screening and early diagnosis and can lead to better survival results and less disease burden. With a quicker turnaround (1-2 weeks), the liquid biopsy can help expedite the patient journey through the cancer pathways reducing the incidence of cancer target breaches. In order to design studies to test this hypothesis the investigators require preliminary data quantifying sensitivity and specificity of the assay in this setting.

Full description

The 5-year survival for Head and Neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) across all TNM stage groups is approximately 50%. Patients who are present with stage I & II disease have significantly better survival. When a patient presents to their general practitioner (GP) with symptoms suggestive of HNSCC, they may be referred for urgent specialist input through the suspected cancer referral (SCR) pathway, which include dedicated neck lump clinics. Majority of the patients diagnosed via the SCR pathway present with Stage III &IV disease, which has a direct impact on outcomes.

HNSCC is classified as an uncommon cancer and as such diagnosis and treatment is undertaken in specialist tertiary referral centres. The care of patients initially diagnosed with HNSCC in smaller secondary care hospitals is transferred to these specialist tertiary referral centres via the Inter Trust Transfer (ITT). ITT can introduce delays in treatment pathways resulting in a failure to achieve cancer treatment targets. Southwest London HNSCC diagnostic pathway review which was undertaken in February 2021 demonstrated that 40% of ITTs received were greater than 38 days after referral and that 68% of the 62 day target breaches were in patients with ITT.

HNSCC is known to shed fragments of DNA, called circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) into the bloodstream. The investigators have developed novel ultra-sensitive (>90% sensitivity) next generation sequencing (NGS) assay for circulating HPV DNA in patients with non-metastatic locally advanced head and neck cancer. The investigator's current work involves ctDNA detection to cover the spectrum of genetic alterations in HNC using a single sequencing workflow to detect copy number aberrations (CNAs), HPV DNA (to cover 99.9% of HNC related HPV) and somatic mutations.

The use of ultra-sensitive NGS assay for detection of ctDNA using a simple blood test (liquid biopsy) holds a great promise for cancer screening and early diagnosis and can lead to better survival results and less disease burden. This has been proven in proof of principle studies in nasopharyngeal cancer (Chan N Engl J Med 2017; 377:513-522). Furthermore, this test can be administered in smaller secondary care hospitals in parallel to the ITT. With a quicker turnaround (1-2 weeks), the liquid biopsy can help expedite the patient journey through the cancer pathways reducing the incidence of cancer target breaches. In order to design studies to test this hypothesis the investigators require preliminary data quantifying sensitivity and specificity of the assay in this setting.

Enrollment

170 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients referred for an Ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration (USFNA) in the neck lump clinic

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient found to have a lump in the thyroid gland at the time of USFNA
  • Unable to give informed consent for biological sample collection
  • Unable to safely participate in clinic sample collection

Trial design

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Shreerang Bhide; Sarah Burton

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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