Evolution of Metabolic and Immune Dysfunction in In-transit Melanoma

Sponsor
Yana Najjar (Other)
Overall Status
Recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT04658303
Collaborator
(none)
20
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36.2
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Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Melanoma in-transit metastases (ITMs) continue to represent a therapeutic dilemma, in that no standard method of treatment has been uniformly adopted. The complexity and heterogeneity of patient and disease characteristics, including the location and number of ITMs presents a barrier to a one size fits all treatment approach. Treatment of patients with limited regional disease remains challenging. Patients are typically treated with a combination of surgery, regional therapy, systemic therapy. Data on the management of ITMs is limited, even with the availability of immunotherapy (IMT). This study will use the unique etiology of ITMs to facilitate the understanding of how individual lesions metabolically and immunologically evolve as they move away from the primary tumor site. It is hypothesize that as ITMs move away from the primary melanoma site each will harbor progressively hypermetabolic tumor cells and a harsher microenvironment.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase

Detailed Description

This study will use a novel platform to profile patient biopsies, including microscopic analysis, flow cytometry for phenotyping, metabolic, and functional analyses, and metabolic profiling by Seahorse analysis to understand the unique etiology of ITMs to understand how individual melanoma lesions metabolically and immunologically evolve as they move away from the primary tumor site. A large amount of translational data is able to be derived from from an individual tissue biopsies. This study will utilize this platform to extensively evaluate 2-5 (melanoma) in-transit metastases (ITMs) per patient. It is hypothesized that as ITMs move away from the primary melanoma site each will harbor progressively hypermetabolic tumor cells and a harsher microenvironment. Each ITM station will be deeply profiled using metabolic assays, flow cytometry, and highly multiplexed immunofluorescent microscopy including, to interrogate the metabolic profiles of tumor and immune system in individual melanoma ITMs, and, to Determine tumor:immune interaction in the context of hypoxia using high-dimensional imaging. Using high throughput sequencing technologies, it will determined how tumor and immune cells interact and evolve during the course of transit in ITMs (as these cells become more metabolically and immunologically suppressive as they migrate further from the primary site). The clonal evolution analysis of tumor cells through and pimonidazole-enabled single cell RNA-sequencing will be used to identify transcriptomic changes in tumor, immune, and stromal cells correlated with hypoxia exposure.

Study Design

Study Type:
Observational
Anticipated Enrollment :
20 participants
Observational Model:
Cohort
Time Perspective:
Prospective
Official Title:
Evolution of Metabolic and Immune Dysfunction in In-transit Melanoma
Actual Study Start Date :
Feb 24, 2021
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Mar 1, 2023
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Mar 1, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Pimonidazole

Single dose of 0.5 gm/m^2 of pimonidazole (approximately 13 mg/kg)

Drug: Pimonidazole
Pimonidazole is not used with therapeutic intent, and has a non-hazardous designation. It has been widely used for in-vivo evaluation of intratumor hypoxia, and patients will take PO pimonidazole before the scheduled biopsy. Patients receive an oral dose of pimonidazole, a safe chemical tracer up to 24 hours prior to biopsy. Pimonidazole allows for true hypoxia staining; pimonidazole binds hypoxic proteins covalently, creating an antigen that facilitates the imaging, flow cytometry, and scRNA-seq experiments proposed. Pimonidazole has been previously used in patients and is safe and well tolerated, without anticipated adverse events.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Immunometabolic profiling [At baseline]

    Immunometabolic profiling of individual microenvironments in ITMs (in-transit metastases) using flow cytometry via T cell subsets, markers of activation/exhaustion, and metabolic insufficiency (mitochondrial mass, glucose uptake capacity, and hypoxia by pimonidazole staining.

  2. Tumor cell metabolism [At baseline]

    Tumor cells metabolism of ITMs (in-transit metastases) will be profiled using the Seahorse flux analyzer to measure oxygen consumption rate (OCR) and extracellular acidification rate (ECAR).

  3. Imaging of individual ITM stations [At baseline]

    CODEX imaging will be conducted on sections from each station using extensive phenotyping panels.

  4. hypoxia exposure analyses [At baseline]

    Akoya Biosciences' CODEX analysis suite and custom ImageJ plugins will be used to determine proximity of cells to one another, coincidence with hypoxic areas, and accumulation of regulatory/dysfunctional populations.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Whole exome sequencing of tumor cells [At baseline]

    Whole exome sequencing will be performed to identify mutations in tumor cells isolated from each lesion. Analysis will be in an 'intrapatient' manner as a function of distance from the primary site.

  2. Clonal evolution analysis of individual ITMs [At baseline]

    Mutations will be used to construct trees revealing clonal representation and diversity at each station. The goal is to determine how migration away from the primary site affects a tumor's heterogeneity in terms of tumor cells.

  3. Cellular heterogeneity and transcriptomic state [At baseline]

    The composition of each ITM tumor microenvironment will be analyzed using dimension reduction strategies, in collaboration with a bioinformatics core. Each biopsy sample will be sequenced simultaneously but hashed separately, allowing all ITMs to be compared in one run. Clusters will be identified using lineage-defining genes and then transcriptomic states identified within each cluster.

  4. TCR clonotype and trajectory analysis [At baseline]

    5' scRNAseq will be used for identification of TCR sequences to identify individual T cell clones. Clonotypes will be revealed in each lesion, and diffusion pseudotime analyses will be employed within each ITM and between ITMs to determine differentiation states of various T cell subsets. It is thought that distant lesions will harbor more terminally differentiated T cells.

  5. Tumor transcriptomic states [At baseline]

    Analysis of hypoxia exposure for each cell using unique pimonidazole CITE-seq strategy also allows for the a. As hypoxia promotes the terminal differentiation of T cells, it is expected that distant ITMs will harbor more hypoxic cells and that terminally differentiated T cells will experience higher levels of hypoxia.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  1. Be willing and able to provide written informed consent for the trial.

  2. Be ≥ 18 years of age on day of signing informed consent.

  3. A histological diagnosis of melanoma and at least two in-transit lesions at distinct distances from the primary site. Patients may be enrolled on the basis of a diagnosis of in-transit disease by a treating melanoma oncologist.

  4. Cutaneous, mucosal or uveal melanoma are permitted.

  5. Patients may be on treatment or treatment naïve.

  6. Female patients of childbearing potential must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test within 7 days from the time of pimonidazole administration.

Exclusion Criteria:
  1. Subjects with in-transit disease that is not amenable to biopsy per the treating physician are excluded.

  2. Subjects with known chronic immunosuppression (such as biologic agents like remicade, mycophenolate, methotrexate, prednisone >20 mg daily).

  3. Subjects who are known to be HIV+, Hep B or Hep C positive.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 UPMC Hillman Cancer Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States 15232

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Yana Najjar

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Yana Najjar, MD, UPMC Hillman Cancer Center

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Yana Najjar, Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT04658303
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • HCC 20-263
First Posted:
Dec 8, 2020
Last Update Posted:
Mar 2, 2022
Last Verified:
Feb 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
Yes
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Yana Najjar, Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Mar 2, 2022