Skip to content

Observational Study on Rectal Cancer to Verify if Response After Chemo-radiotherapy Can be Predicted With a Particular Blood Test.

A Proof-of-concept, Prospective, Observational Study to Investigate the Value of Liquid Biopsies to Predict Tumor Response After Neoadjuvant Chemo-radiotherapy in Patients With Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer: the LiBReCa Study

Status
Terminated
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03699410
Acronym
LiBReCa
Enrollment
25
Registered
2018-10-09
Start date
2018-08-28
Completion date
2020-10-20
Last updated
2021-10-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

Brief summary

Research project for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer in which biological material and health-related personal data are collected. The aim is to investigate if an additional method (liquid biopsies) can predict the response after chemo-radiotherapy and before surgery.

Detailed description

The standard treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer (T3 -T4 and / or N+) is neoadjuvant (pre-operative) chemo-radiotherapy (nCRT) followed by radical surgery. In patients after complete response following nCRT, surgery may not add any survival benefit but it is still performed. Since clinical complete response has only partial concordance with pathological complete response, an additional method that helps identify those patients with a true complete response is needed to avoid unnecessary surgery and its associated potential complications.. The hypothesis underlying this study is that the quantitative and qualitative evaluation of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) of liquid biopsy, based on the amount of ctDNA or on the detection of specific gene alterations respectively, may be directly correlated to the clinical, histopathological and radiological response of the tumor to nCRT. This study will not interfere with the patient's routine treatment pathway and there will be no deviation from the standard of care. The only additional study intervention will be the collection of blood samples at 6 different time points which can be combined with the regular blood examination performed during the treatment. At the time of diagnosis, tumor staging and histopathology on tumor biopsy will be performed. Patients will receive standardized neoadjuvant therapy and will be operated after an observational period of 10 weeks. Peripheral blood sample will be collected at 6 time points: pre-nCRT, at the end of the nCRT, at 4th and 7th week post-CRT, on the day of the surgery (before surgical resection), on the post-operative day 5 (in hospital). Mesenteric blood sample will be collected intra-operatively on the day of the surgery. Tumor sampling will be performed during tumor staging, as standard of care, and on the resection specimen. A combined qualitative and quantitative approach for the molecular characterization of tissue and liquid biopsy using next-generation sequencing will be carried out.

Interventions

Radiotherapy with total dose of at least 50 Gy on the tumor (cT) and the involved nodes (cN+) and with standard fractionation (1.8 Gy/fraction), 5 days/week.

DRUGNeoadjuvant chemotherapy

Oral Capecitabine, at the standard dose of 825 mg/m2 twice daily, concomitant to radiotherapy.

PROCEDURERadical surgery

The time point of surgery is usually dependent on surgeon's and institutional habits and lies within 6 to 12 weeks after the end of nCRT. Surgeons participating in this study will be asked to operate patients on the 10th week after the end of nCRT.

Sponsors

Clinical Trial Unit Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale
CollaboratorOTHER
Dimitri Christoforidis
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
CASE_ONLY
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age ≥ 18 years old * Locally advanced rectal cancer (T3 or T4, and/or N+) requiring long course nCRT (as decided by the regional tumor board) * Patient fit for surgery and treated with curative intent * Willingness to complete all clinical and radiological examinations foreseen by the study * Availability of tissue specimen for molecular characterization at baseline * Written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

* Presence of metastases * Insufficient material on the tissue biopsy to be left in archives of the Cantonal Institute of Pathology for further evaluations/analyses * Insufficient amount of tumor cells in the tissue biopsy for the molecular characterization * Inability to consent and follow the procedures of the study * Women who are pregnant or breast feeding

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Negative Prognostic Value (NPV)day of surgeryNPV of the liquid biopsy of ctDNA drawn from the mesenteric and peripheral blood

Countries

Switzerland

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026