Early Detection of Cancer Onset Based on Sensing Field Cancerization at the Organ Level in the Alimentary Tract Using an Integrated Stimulated Raman/Scattering Modality for Endoscopic Real-time in Vivo Measurements
NCT ID: NCT05247346
Last Updated: 2023-06-13
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
60 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-07-01
2024-12-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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During our preclinical studies, the investigators investigated the feasibility of Raman and scattering measurements for detecting field cancerization on human tissue (BE and colon) samples and tissue samples from murine models (intestinal model: villin-Cre/APCco/wt mice, and BE model: L2-IL1B/WT mice, healthy control models: WT mice). Human biopsies included BE and colorectal samples of non-suspected tissue from organs without an established dysplastic lesion (group A; without expected field cancerization), and non-suspected tissue from organs with an established dysplastic lesion (group B; expected field cancerization). In addition, samples were obtained from dysplastic lesions in BE patients (Group C).
Non-affected human tissue samples from Group B showed remarkably concentered results along the Raman spectrum, which appeared to show more similarity to the Raman results of the dysplastic lesion-samples rather than the other non-affected tissue samples from Group. A. The samples from group A showed a large variability of data along their Raman spectrum. This variability hampered to establish significant differences in the non-affected tissue samples from organs without expected field cancerization to the ones from the organs with expected field cancerization. Interestingly, increases in the three parameters measured by the scattering (disorder strength, depolarization rate, and roughness frequency) were all discriminative for non-affected tissue samples from BEs with established field cancerization (Group B) from the non-affected samples from BEs without expected field cancerization (Group A). In the rectum, solely the disorder parameter yielded significant differences between non-dysplastic colon tissue vs tissue from colons with established field cancerization.
In the murine models that grew EAC and intestinal cancer, the Raman measurements of dysplastic tissue samples showed different peaks of wavenumbers in the Raman spectrum compared to the normal tissue samples of the WT at different organ level (forestomach, SCJ, stomach, intestine). Moreover, Raman results enabled differentiation of non-affected tissue samples from mice with field cancerization (i.e. containing an established tumor) compared to normal/non-affected tissue samples from WT mice (i.e. not to have field cancerization). In addition, the combination of parameters of the scattering and PWS modalities result in a sensitive detection modality that van be used in an auxiliary fashion to the Raman cancer screening.
Thus, the investigators hypothesize that an integrated approach of Raman spectroscopy and scattering measurements enable the detection of field cancerization of esophageal and colorectal tissue.
Therefore, the investigators aim to assess the safety of probe-based scattering and Raman measurements using the SENSITIVE system of alimentary mucosa during GI endoscopy.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
DIAGNOSTIC
NONE
Study Groups
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probe-based endoscopic Raman and scattering measurements of GI tissue
probe-based integrated Raman spectroscopy and scattering measurements of BE and colorectal tissue during GI endoscopy
SENSITIVE system
probe-based integrated Raman spectroscopy and scattering measurements of Barrett's and colorectal tissue during GI endoscopy
Interventions
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SENSITIVE system
probe-based integrated Raman spectroscopy and scattering measurements of Barrett's and colorectal tissue during GI endoscopy
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Age of 18 years or older;
* Written informed consent.
Exclusion Criteria
* Patients with a medical history of head and neck or lung cancer;
* Patients with a history of endoluminal ablative therapy or radiation therapy;
* Patients younger than 18 years
* Other medical conditions of the esophagus or colon that potentially can disturb measurements of the SRS/scattering spectra such as (eosinophil) esophagitis, inflammatory bowel disease or a medical history of radiation therapy;
* Physical or mental disorders that comprise the ability of the patient to give informed consent.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Technical University of Munich
OTHER
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
UNKNOWN
Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens
UNKNOWN
University Medical Center Groningen
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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University Medical Center Groningen
Groningen, , Netherlands
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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202100772
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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