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Despite modern surgical and medical treatments, breast cancer can re-occur and lead 20% of patients to death. During the last 20 years, pre-clinical studies have shown that treatment failures may be due to the presence of a sub-type of cancer cells, the cancer stem cells, which are resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. By chance, doxycycline, an old, inexpensive and safe molecule seems to target effectively these cancer stem cells. This study proposes to check for the clinical efficacy of doxycycline to target the cancer stem cells and improve the response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in ER+/HER2- breast cancers.
Full description
Patients with early stage ER+/HER2- breast cancer (BC) have a low pathologic complete response (pCR) rate of less than 15%. Over the past 20 years, studies have identified a subset of cancer cells with tumorigenic and stem-like properties, known as cancer stem cells (CSCs), that are involved in tumour initiation, metastasis, relapse and resistance to treatment. Cancer cells with stem-like properties are known to possess cellular plasticity that not only enables self-renewal capacity, but also exhibits high tumourigenic potential and resistance to oncological therapies such as chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy.
CSCs can arise from normal adult breast stem cells through mutations or directly from differentiated tumor cells. Tumour hypoxia has been shown to be one of the major factors promoting and maintaining the stemness phenotype. The metabolism of CSCs in hypoxia relies on a delicate balance between reduced energy requirements through reduced proliferation and an altered balance between mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation ("OXPHOS") and cytosolic glycolysis, while maintaining mitochondrial redox homeostasis to control reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. Any slight imbalance in mitochondrial redox homeostasis in CSCs, leading to transient effects on ROS, may promote their differentiation towards their non-stem tumour cell counterparts. Consequently, specific drugs targeting mitochondrial metabolism, leading to increased ROS levels, may destabilise CSCs.
This study proposes to check for the clinical efficacy of doxycycline to target the cancer stem cells and improve the response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in ER+/HER2- breast cancers. The change in the stemness marker, ALDH1, assessed before and after treatment and the effect of doxycycline on the pathological response will be studied.
The translational work will be to better define these stem cells and to grow organoid cultures to study the effects of the different drugs in vitro. This study also aims to address a number of translational research questions using a tumor sample obtained from an additional core biopsy prior to treatment initiation and using a fresh tumor sample from the surgical specimen in the case of residual tumor after neoadjuvant treatment:
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Written informed consent according to Swiss law and ICH GCP E6(R2) regulations before registration and prior to any trial specific procedures.
Histologically confirmed ER+/HER2- primary invasive breast cancer, according to ASCO/CAP Guideline1,2, defined as ER expression rate ≥ 1%.
Patients are candidate for curative surgery and with a tumor size of at least 2 cm and nodal classification cN0-3 according to the 8th edition, January 2017 of the anatomic TNM classification3.
Patients with multiple synchronous ipsilateral tumors are allowed, as long as all lesions are ER+/HER2-. Only one target lesion will be considered for ALDH1 primary endpoint, and the target lesion has to be the largest lesion.
Patients are planned for neoadjuvant chemotherapy according to the local standards.
Patients accept standard curative surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy with 4 cycles of epirubicin and cyclophosphamide (EC) followed by 12 doses of weekly paclitaxel (or nab-paclitaxel).
Diagnostic tumor tissue is available for the mandatory central pathology examinations; or an additional biopsy is planned in case of lack of remaining material from the diagnostic biopsy, provided that the patient has consented to the optional TR-project.
Patients with a prior malignancy and treated with curative intention are eligible if all treatment of that malignancy was completed at least 2 years before registration in this trial and the patient has no evidence of disease at registration. Less than 2 years is acceptable for adequately treated cervical carcinoma in situ or localized non-melanoma skin cancer.
Male or female patients age ≥ 18 years.
ECOG performance status 0-1.
Adequate bone marrow function:
Adequate hepatic function:
Adequate renal function: estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) ≥ 50 mL/min/1.73 m2 (according to CKD-EPI formula).
No known cardiac dysfunction contraindicating the planned neoadjuvant chemotherapy with 4 cycles of EC followed by 12 doses of weekly paclitaxel.
Women of childbearing potential must use highly effective, are not pregnant or lactating and agree not to become pregnant during trial treatment and until 12 months after the last dose of investigational drug. A negative pregnancy test before inclusion into the trial is required for all women of childbearing potential.
Men agree not to donate sperm or to father a child during trial treatment and until 12 months after the last dose of investigational drug.
Patient is able and willing to swallow trial drug as whole tablet.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
There are currently no registered sites for this trial.
Central trial contact
Daniela Hofmann, PhD
Start date
Mar 15, 2025 • 1 month ago
Today
Apr 27, 2025
End date
Mar 31, 2028 • in 2 years
Lead Sponsor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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