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About
Recent advances in understanding how cancer develops and spreads have led to effective new treatments and improved outcomes for patients with melanoma. However, we know that these new treatments do not work for all patients: some do not respond to them and some initially respond but then develop resistance. The overall aim of this study will be to collect tumour biopsies, biomarkers present in the blood, and other biological specimens which can be used to try to understand why resistance to anti-cancer treatment occurs, and to develop predictive biomarkers of this resistance in patients with locally advanced and metastatic malignant melanoma.
The study will be open to NHS patients aged 16 and over, who have been diagnosed with advanced melanoma, and who will be receiving treatment for their disease as part of their routine care. Patients will be asked to provide samples from tumour biopsies before, during and after treatment. We will also ask for blood samples to look at biomarkers in the blood and see how these correspond with tumour samples, which will further help us to understand treatment response. Biomarkers are substances in the body that can be measured and help indicate how a disease is developing. It is hoped that soon we will be able to monitor cancer by analysing a patient's blood samples, thus reducing the need for biopsies. As blood tests could be taken more frequently, signs that patients are becoming resistant to treatments could be picked up sooner.
As well as monitoring biomarkers, we would also like to understand what happens to the healthy cells surrounding the tumour during treatment. This will improve our understanding of how cells adapt and respond to treatments, and may eventually lead to the discovery of new biomarkers to help predict which patients will develop resistance to certain treatments.
Full description
This will be a prospective study recruiting patients who have been diagnosed wth advanced melanoma.
Participants will be asked to give informed consent before any samples are collected.
Participants will be asked to donate tissue and other biospecimens (see list below) that are surplus to clinical requirements if a participant is undergoing any of the following as part of their routine care:
Participants will be asked to consent to having easily accessible lesions biopsied or resected, which are not required for clinical reasons, but are for research purposes only. Participants can still be part of the study even if they do not agree to these extra, optional biopsies. Tissue samples from the surgical specimens and the original primaries will be examined to look for molecular markers to correlate with circulating tumour molecular markers.
Consent will be requested to grow cell lines from the donated tumour tissue and implant tumour tissue into mice to characterise the genetic changes seen in both CTCs and biopsies, in terms of resistance to targeted agents, in the lab setting. Consent to this part of the study will be optional.
A maximum of 50mls blood sample will be requested from participants before any intervention. Further blood samples (maximum of 50mls each time) will also be requested as follows:
We will be asking a small group of patients, approx 20, to consent to weekly blood samples, for up to 8 weeks, for specific biomarker analyses.
Clinical data will be collected for each patient, looking at demographics, baseline haematology and biochemistry blood results, radiological extent of disease, time to disease progression, clinical and histological features of the primary. Patients will be followed up for approximately 10 years to assess their outcome.
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300 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Gupta, Dr; Valpione, Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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