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RECRUITING
NCT06190847

Oral Microbiome is Associated With the Response to Chemoradiotherapy in Initial Inoperable Patients With Esophageal Squamous Cell Cancer

Sponsor: Anhui Provincial Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Esophageal cancer accounts for more than half of the world, seriously affecting people's health in China. 95% patients are squamous cell carcinoma. Surgery is the preferred treatment for early and middle stage esophageal cancer, but patients with clinical stage T4b or other surgical contraindications have no surgical opportunity. In recent years, radical chemoradiotherapy has played a key role in the treatment of local advanced esophageal cancer with some poor predicting biomarkers. Oral bacteria may play a pathogenic role in cancer and other chronic diseases by producing chemical carcinogens and inflammatory factors through direct metabolism. A large number of studies have also suggested that tooth loss and poor oral hygiene are closely related to upper digestive tract cancer, indicating the possible role of oral microorganisms in the occurrence and development of upper digestive tract cancer, and saliva is the main source of oral flora colonization. Therefore, it is worth further research to explore the interaction between microbial metabolism imbalance and radiotherapy in patients with esophageal cancer. In summary, we intend to conduct a prospective cohort study to explore the role of salivary microbes in radiotherapy in patients with initially inoperable patients with local advanced esophageal cancer.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 85 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

97

Start Date

2023-07-01

Completion Date

2026-07-01

Last Updated

2024-01-05

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

regular chemoradiotherapy

regular chemoradiotherapy

Locations (1)

Dong Qian

Hefei, Anhui, China