SEATTLE

Temporal variation in exhaled VOCs in response to therapeutic intervention in oesophageal cancer patients

Completed
Cancer Focus
Oesophageal
Sponsor
Imperial College London
Funding
Salgi Esophageal Cancer Research Foundation

Background

Previous studies have established altered VOC profiles in oesophageal cancer, but all assessed breath at a single time point using cross-sectional designs. Longitudinal variation in exhaled VOCs, urinary VOCs, the contribution of the upper GI microbiome, and the effect of therapeutic intervention remain unknown. Understanding this variation is critical for interpreting intra-subject variability and likely mechanisms of VOC production. An expected decline in target VOCs following therapy would verify the tumour–VOC link and offer opportunities for monitoring treatment response and disease recurrence.

SEATTLE

Currently Recruiting

Aims

  1. Determine longitudinal VOC variations during curative therapy
  2. Validate the previously published oesophageal cancer breath test model
  3. Correlate exhaled VOCs with clinical parameters and treatment response
  4. Investigate VOCs following tumour resection and their association with disease recurrence
  5. Investigate longitudinal variations in the upper GI microbiome

Methods

Longitudinal, single-centre cohort study at Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle. 50 patients with oesophageal cancer. Breath and biofluids (urine and saliva) collected at four time points: (1) before treatment; (2) after neoadjuvant therapy; (3) following surgical resection (hospital discharge); (4) routine postoperative follow-up (6u201312 months). Breath collected on TD tubes and transported to Imperial College London VOC Laboratory.

Participation

Recruitment to this trial takes place through participating NHS centres. If you think you may be eligible, please speak with your GP or hospital clinician who can refer you through the appropriate pathway.

Healthcare professional enquiries: Greg S J Dewar

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