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Background:
A person s genome is the collection of all their genes. A gene instructs individual cells to make proteins. Proteins are involved in all of our body s chemical processes. Genome sequencing allows researchers to find variations in genes. Some of these are normal and are not known to cause disease. Some variants are known to cause or affect diseases like cancer. Researchers want to study genetic variants in people with cancer who also have an immunologic disease like HIV.
Objective:
To study the biology of cancer in order to improve ways to prevent, detect, and treat it.
Eligibility:
Adults at least 18 years old with certain cancers and/or immunodeficiencies
Design:
Participants will be screened with medical history, physical exam, and lab tests.
Participants will give samples of one or more tissue type.
They may give blood or urine samples.
Researchers may get samples of tissue when participants have surgery or when the participants are on other protocols in the NCI.
Participants may have a procedure to have tissue samples removed.
Researchers may collect data from participant medical records.
Researchers will compare the genes in a participant s cancer tissue to their normal tissue. They may use the tissue cells to grow new cells in a lab.
Participants may be contacted about the results.
The samples will be stored for future research. No personal data will be kept with them.
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Full description
Background:
Objective:
-The primary objective of this protocol is to support molecular investigation of viral associated malignancies, malignancies occurring in the setting of HIV or other immunodeficiencies, and Castleman disease, by accrual of high quality, clinically annotated tissue from such participants as well as participants with tumors that may serve as appropriate controls.
Eligibility:
Design:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Patients with one or more of the following:
HIV or other acquired immunodeficiency and cancer
Viral-associated cancer or cancer hypothesized to be caused by a virus
HIV-negative patients with cancer that commonly occurs in people with HIV
--KSHV-associated malignancy or related diseases, such as Multicentric Castleman Disease
A malignancy hypothesized to be caused by an endogenous retrovirus
Idiopathic Castleman disease
Cancer diagnoses will be confirmed by the NCI Laboratory of Pathology. A biopsy will be collected if sufficient archival tissue is not available.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
280 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Irene B Ekwede, R.N.; Robert Yarchoan, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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