Do Changes in ctDNA Predict Response for Patients With Oesophageal Cancer Receiving Durvalumab
- Sponsor
- Simon C Pacey, MD
- Study ID
- NCT03653052
- Phase
- PHASE2
- Status
- Active Not Recruiting
Conditions
- Oesophageal Cancer
Eligibility Criteria
- Sex
- ALL
- Age
- 18 Years - N/A
- Healthy Volunteers
- Not accepted
Interventions
- Durvalumab — DRUGDurvalumab will be administered via an infusion in the arm, over a duration of up to 1 hour.
Study Details
Patients with cancer are increasingly being treated with drugs designed to modulate the response of their immune system, broadly to boost their body's defences against cancer. However, there is an unmet need to identify which patients are unlikely to benefit. Deciding on benefit from therapy uses standard imaging methods (e.g. CT scans), which can take time (months) whereas DNA in the bloodstream could be measured more rapidly. The main aim of this study is to assess whether changes in the level of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) can quickly determine a patients response. This would enable patients to change therapies more quickly if they are not responding and reduce exposure to unnecessary side effects.
Key Dates
- Start date
- Oct 30, 2018
- Status verified
- Apr 2025
- Primary completion
- Nov 11, 2021
- Completion
- Jun 30, 2026
Study Design
- Enrollment
- 18 participants (actual)
- Allocation
- NA
- Intervention model
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary purpose
- TREATMENT
Arms
- Experimental: DurvalumabPatients with advanced oesophageal cancer will be administered with 1500mg of durvalumab once every 4 weeks for up to 6 months.
Primary Outcome Measure
Clinical response to therapy (durvalumab) [ Time Frame: 26 weeks ]
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- PULSO Trial: Pulsed Low-Dose-Rate (PLDR) Radiation Chemoradiation (CRT) vs. Standard CRT for Esophageal CancerPHASE2 · Recruiting · Medical College of Wisconsin · Milwaukee, Wisconsin