| Literature DB >> 26531748 |
Charlotte Ngo1,2, Sanne Samuels3, Ksenia Bagrintseva1, Andrea Slocker4, Philippe Hupé1,5,6,7, Gemma Kenter3, Marina Popovic8, Nina Samet9, Patricia Tresca1, Heiko von der Leyen10, Eric Deutsch4, Roman Rouzier1, Lisa Belin1, Maud Kamal1, Suzy Scholl11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical cancer (CC) is -second to breast cancer- a dominant cause of gynecological cancer-related deaths worldwide. CC tumor biopsies and blood samples are of easy access and vital for the development of future precision medicine strategies.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26531748 PMCID: PMC4632364 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1801-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1RAIDs project - participant countries. RAIDs is an international multidisciplinary cooperation between academic hospitals, SMEs and platforms for translational research (http://www.raids-fp7.eu/). 7 EU countries participate in RAIDs project: France, Hungary, Germany, Netherlands, Serbia, Moldova and Romania. BIO-RAIDs study is performed in 6 EU countries: France, Germany, Netherlands, Serbia, Moldova and Romania
Fig. 2Recommended treatment and time of biopsies. Patients with previously untreated, advanced stage cervical cancer (stage IB2-IV) will be enrolled in BIO-RAIDs study and undergo standard treatment. The recommendations for standards of treatment by stage and the timing of biopsies are shown. B1: biopsy before treatment; B2: biopsy during or at the end of treatment in case of poor response/progression; B3: biopsy in case of recurrence
Centers participating in the BIO-RAIDs study. All the participating centers in the BIO-RAIDs study on the moment of submission are shown
| France | Institut Curie - Paris, Institut Bergonie - Bordeaux, Institut Rene Huguenin Curie - Saint Cloud, Institut Gustave Roussy – Villejuif, Institut de Cancérologie Lorraine – Nancy, Centre Georges François Leclerc – Dijon ; Institut de Cancérologie de l'Ouest - Nantes ; Institut de Cancérologie de l'Ouest - Paul Papin – Angers ; Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou - Paris; Institut régional du Cancer Montpellier (Val d'Aurelle) – Montpellier and Centre Antoine Lacassagne-Nice. |
| Germany | Hannover Medical School – Hannover, Carl-Gustav Carus University - Dresden |
| The Netherlands | Netherlands Cancer Institute – Antoni van Leeuwenhoek (NKI-AVL) - Amsterdam, Amsterdam Medical Center - Amsterdam |
| Romania | Clinica Radiotherapie Timisoara, Spitalul Clinic Municipal – Oradea, Institutul Regional de Oncologie - Iasi |
| Serbia | Institut of Oncology of Vojvodina (IOV) – Novi Sad |
| Moldova | Institute of Oncology of Republic of Moldova - Chisinau |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| 1) No prior treatment for CC. | 1) Patient enrolled in a clinical trial involving an investigative new agent. |
| 2) FIGO Stage IB2 to IVB; all histological subtypes (excluding neuro-endocrine type). | |
| 2) Co morbidity, preventing patient to tolerate the proposed standard treatment. | |
| 3) Past history of invasive cancer over the 5 years preceding entry in the present trial (except basal cell carcinoma and carcinoma in situ of the cervix). | |
| 3) Pelvic MRI available or planned before the start of treatment. | |
| 4) Possibility to communicate imaging data by CD ROM (format DICOM 3.0 or more). | 4) Impossibility to carry out evaluation by MRI (patient claustrophobic, pacemaker, metallic implant, non-availability, other). |
| 5) Patient deprived from ability to decide on her own. | |
| 5) Disease amenable to biopsy (3 tumor samples are mandatory prior to treatment). | |
| 6) Patient unable to have a regular follow up for geographical, social or psychological reasons. | |
| 6) Age ≥ 18 years. | |
| 7) Pregnancy or patient old enough to procreate and not using effective contraceptive method. | |
| 2) ECOG 0-2. | |
| 3) Life expectancy > 6 months. | |
| 4) Patient eligible for standard treatment (according to standards of each center). | |
| 5) Patient having health care insurance. | |
| 6) Informed and signed consent by patient. |
Biobanking during BIO-RAIDs study
Fig. 3From sample to technique – sample flow. Patient samples (blood samples and biopsies) will be centralized at local centers and then sent to research platforms, where the material will processed and analyzed by different methods ( IHC, HPV insertion, sequencing, RPPA). Centralized biobanking of remaining material will be performed at SeqOmics (Hungary)
Fig. 4KDI – Knowledge and Data Integration. Integration of heterogeneous clinical and biological/molecular data requires a powerful information system. Data integration: all data (clinical data from eCRF, biological data, including tumor microenvironment (TME) analysis using immunohistochemistry (IHC) and HPV typing and raw data from technological platforms: exome and targeted sequencing on gDNA and ctDNA, reverse phase protein analysis (RPPA)) will be integrated into KDI core system. Afterwards advanced research functionalities will enable multiple data queries. Specific bioinformatics pipelines will generate new integrative knowledge from these heterogeneous sources of data (figure adapted from Servant et al. [22])