Acceptability and Feasibility Study of Patient-specific 'Tumouroids' as Personalised Treatment Screening Tools

Sponsor
University College, London (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT03300102
Collaborator
(none)
19
2
11.7
9.5
0.8

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

In England, more than three hundred thousand people are diagnosed with cancer each year. The diagnostic and treatment pathways for multiple cancers have greatly developed over the past decade. However, novel treatments are expensive and currently discrimination between responders and non-responders is still suboptimal. There is a pressing need to develop tools that allow for better disease characterisation and stratification. Personalised medicine, whereby prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of diseases is aimed at the individual level, is a growing field. Predicting patient-specific treatment response is challenging as response depends not only on the characteristics of cancer cells but also on how these cells interact with their immediate surrounding environment and on how the tumour interacts with the host. A simplistic model is therefore insufficient to predict treatment response. Complex, patient-derived animal models have been used to this effect but are expensive, may take up to 6 months to provide clinically relevant answers, and pose ethical issues. In the past in vitro models lacked complexity as they were based solely on the two-dimensional (2D) growth of cancer cells. Nowadays the use of 3D tumour models has provided an extra level of complexity to in vitro studies. With these models it is possible to recreate tumour characteristics that were lost in 2D, such as cell-cell interaction between cancer cells and between cancer and stromal cells, cell-matrix interaction, or hypoxia.

The investigators have developed a 3D complex tumour model - named tumouroid. Using this model, preliminary work has been undertaken which allows the growth of patient-derived tumouroids using primary cancer cells from patients.

This personalised platform can be challenged by therapeutics used in clinical practice and response to treatment can be assessed via appropriate assays.

The study goals are twofold:

To assess patient acceptability to the use of patient derived tumour models for future decision-making, and To assess the feasibility of generating patient derived renal cancer tumouroids and using them as platforms to test drug response.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Questionnaires, interviews and or tissue donation

Detailed Description

This trial is a prospective tissue collection of renal cell carcinoma samples, including collection of data using both structured Likert 12 item questionnaires and semi structured interviews to assess acceptability. With the development of patient-derived tumouroids the investigators would like to overcome the current over-simplified strategies that focus on genetic markers as predictors of response. In the future, the investigators hope to establish tumouroids as a personalised platform to predict patient response to treatment that is more cost-efficient and poses less ethical issues than animal platforms.

This project will assess if patient-derived tumouroids can be therapeutically challenged and if patients would be willing to accept that such platform to guide clinical treatment decision making.

This study is designed to assess primarily patient acceptability. Acceptability will be elicited using Likert scale non-validated questionnaires and in a semi-structured interview in which the views and preferences relating the acceptability or otherwise of the patient derived tumour models and their impact on future decision making will be explored.

The study will also assess feasibility of building tumouroids and challenging them. Feasibility will address the successful transition between the critical phases of generating a viable and responsive tumour model. This begins with the extraction of cancer cells from the explanted tumour and ends with the determination of a response or otherwise to a therapeutic challenge of the viable tumour model at a range of in vitro concentrations.

The findings of this study will be presented at conference(s) and manuscripts will be submitted to appropriate journals for publication.

Study Design

Study Type:
Observational
Actual Enrollment :
19 participants
Observational Model:
Cohort
Time Perspective:
Prospective
Official Title:
A Single Site Study Accessing the Acceptability and Feasibility of Patient-specific 'Tumouroids' as Personalised Treatment Screening Tools
Actual Study Start Date :
Jan 10, 2018
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Aug 1, 2018
Actual Study Completion Date :
Dec 31, 2018

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Patients with suspected or confirmed renal cell carcinoma

Patients with suspected or confirmed renal cell carcinoma who have consented will either donate tissue, or complete a structured questionnaire or a semi-structured interview. Not all patients will have all three interventions, each patient must have at least one.

Other: Questionnaires, interviews and or tissue donation
Subjects will be asked to complete either structured questionnaires, semi-structured interviews or donate tissue. There will be some overlap, but each subject does not have to do all three interventions.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Acceptability [Up to 10 weeks after consent]

    Measured using a Likert scale non-validated structured questionnaire and/or complete a semi structured interview.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Feasibility : Number of tumour tissue samples collected [Up to 10 weeks after consent]

    Number of tumour tissue samples that can be collected within the time frame from consented patients this will be counted.

  2. Feasibility : Gross morphology, weight and size of each sample [Up to 10 weeks after consent]

    Each sample obtained will be weighed and measured.

  3. Feasibility : Cell count after isolation [Up to 10 weeks after consent]

    A physical count of the number of cells isolated from each sample will be collected.

  4. Feasibility: Cell growth method and time [10 days after tumouroid establishment]

    Measurements will be taken of each tumouroid as it grows, each tumouroid will be given ten days to grow at day ten drug challenge will begin..

  5. Feasibility: Drug concentrations tested [On day 10 after tumouroid establishment]

    A log will be kept of the drug concentrations used on all tumouroids.

  6. Feasibility: Duration of drug exposure [5 days of drug exposure]

    Number of days tumouroid was exposed to drug

  7. Feasibility: Drug challenge response [within 6 days of the end of drug exposure.]

    At the end of 5 days of drug exposure tumouroids will be assessed for response to the drug using a commercially available kit that assesses cell metabolism and viability. In addition, tumouroids will be fixed so that cell morphology will be assessed within 6 days of the end of drug exposure.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Adult patients (≥18 years old), of either gender, able to provide consent;

  • Suspected or confirmed renal cell carcinoma;

  • Signed informed consent by patient

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Non-English speaker;

  • Inability to provide informed consent

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Surgical & Interventional Trials Unit London United Kingdom NW12BX
2 Royal Free Hospital London United Kingdom NW3 2QG

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University College, London

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Mark Emberton, Professor of Interventional Oncology, UCL

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
University College, London
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03300102
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 17/0351
First Posted:
Oct 3, 2017
Last Update Posted:
Jan 24, 2019
Last Verified:
Jan 1, 2019
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by University College, London

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jan 24, 2019