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A Bidirectional Cohort Study of COMMD10 Expression in Tumor Tissues for Predicting Radiosensitivity

Recruiting
Conditions
Radiosensitivity
Biomarker
Registration Number
NCT06165224
Lead Sponsor
Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University
Brief Summary

Radiotherapy is one of the main treatments for malignant tumors, and according to authoritative estimates, about 70% of patients with malignant tumors should receive radiotherapy. However, radiation resistance limits its application and clinical curative effect. To find suitable radiation resistance markers and identify patients with radiation resistance, early part of the patients with appropriate radiotherapy sensitization agent or choose other more efficient and low toxicity of treatment, for improving the prognosis of patients, improve the quality of survival is of great significance, it is also the difficult point in the present study. However, there are no effective biomarkers to predict radiosensitivity. Through our previous basic research and analysis of clinical tumor tissues, we have found that the low expression of copper metabolism domain protein 10 (COMMD10) is associated with radioresistance, and COMMD10 is an effective marker for predicting radiosensitivity. We planned to conduct a single-center, prospective cohort study to verify the reliability of COMMD10 as a predictive marker for radiosensitivity in pan-cancer patients.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
400
Inclusion Criteria
  1. At least 18 years old;
  2. Voluntarily sign informed consent;
  3. Nasopharyngeal carcinoma, head and neck tumor, lung cancer, breast cancer, stomach cancer, colorectal cancer, glioma, esophageal cancer, liver cancer, bile duct cancer, cervical cancer, prostate cancer confirmed by pathology;
  4. Measurable tumor lesions according to RECIST v1.1 criteria;
  5. Patients with radiation therapy indications and voluntarily accept radiotherapy;
  6. ECOG PS score: 0/1.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. There are contraindications to radiotherapy;
  2. Pathological sections could not be obtained;
  3. Presence of metal metabolism-related diseases such as Wilson's disease;
  4. Merge other tumors (has cured basal cell or squamous cell cancer, and cervical cancer in situ except 5);
  5. Patients had any serious coexisting medical conditions that could pose an unacceptable risk or negatively affect trial adherence. "For example, unstable heart disease requiring treatment, chronic hepatitis, kidney disease, poor health status, uncontrolled diabetes (fasting blood glucose > 1.5 × ULN), and mental illness;"
  6. The investigator judged that he was not suitable to participate in the study.

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Objective response rate (ORR)1 month

The objective response rate (ORR) is the proportion of patients who achieve a prespecified reduction in tumor volume that is maintained for a minimum duration. The objective response rate was defined as the sum of complete response plus partial response (CR+PR). According to RECIST1.1 criteria, CR was defined as the disappearance of target lesions and the reduction of the short diameter of pathological lymph nodes to less than 10mm. PR: the sum of the measured diameters of the target lesions reduced by 30% compared with the baseline; PD: the sum of the major diameters of all target lesions increased by at least 20%, and the absolute value of the sum of the major diameters increased by more than 5mm, or new lesions appeared. SD: Changes between PR and PD.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Overall survival (OS)1 years

OS was defined as the time from the date of inclusion until death from any cause.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Nanfang hospital, Southern medical university

🇨🇳

Guangzhou, Guangdong, China

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