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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06703853

Identifying Tissue-of-origin in Transplant Patients and Patients with Malignancies.

Sponsor: Hadassah Medical Organization

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

the investigators are developing a method for diagnosing cell death in the body using blood and urine tests. The test is based on two well-known phenomena in biology. First, when cells in the body die, short fragments of their DNA, about 150 bases long, find their way into the bloodstream for a short period of time of about fifteen minutes to an hour, before being eliminated in the liver and kidney. The details of this process are not fully known, but it is clear that the phenomenon exists. Already today, this phenomenon is widely used clinically for prenatal diagnosis of chromosomal aberrations in the DNA of the fetus that is found in large quantities in the mother's blood. Liquid biopsies from cancer have already been developed, based on the identification of somatic mutations originating from a cancerous tumor in the free DNA found in the serum or plasma. In the case of cancer, liquid biopsies may be a convenient way to monitor the genetic evolution of the tumor, response to treatments, and more. This approach of detecting cell death using free DNA in the bloodstream has a severe limitation when it comes to the death of cells whose genome is not different from the genome of the other tissues in the body, and therefore the DNA cannot be associated with the tissue of origin based on sequence analysis.

Official title: Identifying Tissue-of-origin and Gene Expression Program by Immunoprecipitation of Cell-free Nucleosomes in Transplant Patients and Patients with Malignancies.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 80 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

1000

Start Date

2024-08-01

Completion Date

2027-11-12

Last Updated

2024-11-25

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Locations (1)

Hdassah Hospital

Jerusalem, Israel