Clinical, Translational and Biomarker-Based Female Genital HPV Induced Dysplasia and Cancer Screening Study Using Cf-HPV-DNA Blood Tests
NCT ID: NCT05536843
Last Updated: 2022-09-13
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
500 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2023-01-31
2023-12-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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1. The HPV induced dysplasia in cervical and vaginal tissues can lead to a detectable level of TTMV-HPV-DNA in the blood.
2. Those levels will increase when there is progression of the dysplasia from lower grade to a higher grade.
3. The blood levels of TTMV-HPV-DNA can distinguish lower versus higher grades of HPV induced dysplasia.
4. Serial measurements of TTMV-HPV-DNA in the blood can help diagnose progression of dysplasia to a higher grade earlier and in a more efficient and convenient way. This will help improved compliance with screening, early diagnosis, early interventions, and better clinical outcomes.
5. TTMV-HPV-DNA detection is also likely possible with touch preparations on the lesions, thus leading to easier diagnosis of such lesions.
Specific Aims:
1. To collect blood and touch-preparation samples from the dysplasia lesions among patients with HPV induced dysplasia in cervical and vaginal tissues in human subjects with such lesions in a phase I/II clinical trial setting.
2. Measure TTMV-HPV-DNA in those samples.
3. Correlate the detectable levels of TTMV-HPV-DNA with demographics, grades of dysplasia, progression in the grades with serial measurements and HIV status and correlate with biopsy results in terms of progression in PIN grades and malignant transformation.
4. Design future studies from these findings to enable early detection of potential progression to malignancy so that early curative interventions can be instituted.
Objectives:
1. To develop an innovative and pilot clinical trial in HPV related female genital dysplasia that integrates basic science, public health, clinical and translational cutting-edge knowledge and information using 'liquid biopsy' concepts to help prevent progression to malignancy.
2. To collect and analyze data in a prospective manner among a diverse population in terms of ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic variations that could help improve screening acceptance in the most vulnerable women at risk for female genital cancer.
3. To serve as a model for middle and low-income countries as well as resource-scarce, rural and disparity-affected populations in high-income countries in developing a blood-specimen based HPV-related early diagnosis screening tool.
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Non pregnant women
* No prisoners
* age in between 18 years and 100 years
* Competent to give informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
* Female below 18 years
* Prisoners
18 Years
100 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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University of Mississippi Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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UMississippiRadOnc
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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