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RECRUITING
NCT06886282

Spatial RadiomIcs and TRanscriptomics to the DIscovery of the Cross-link Between Colon Cancer and ChrOnic Kidney Disease

Sponsor: National Cancer Institute, Naples

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) is higher in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) compared to general population. Causal factors have not been clarified so far, although some hypothesis could be formulated. Tumor microenvironment (TME) impacts cancer progression and is influenced by different chronic diseases associated with systemic inflammation. In our study, we aim to address this relevant issue by an in-deep characterization of TME in CKD patients with CRC undergoing surgery. This will provide genes expression directly on tumor tissues. Our network includes three high national relevance hospitals (INT IRCCS Pascale, AOU Vanvitelli and AOU Brotzu) and a Genetic Research Institute (Biogem Scarl). We will recruit two comparing groups of CRC patients eligible for surgical cancer resection: 1. Patients with I-II stage CRC alone, and 2. Patients with I-II stage CRC and CKD. Anthropological, clinical and laboratory tests data will be collected and organized in a database for epidemiological and descriptive analysis of the enrolled cohorts. Patients will be matched by age, gender and cancer stage and will be stratified by the estimated renal function (application of BSA eGFR formula by Janovitz T et al, J Clin Oncol, 2017). Patients will undergo preoperative high resolution abdominal MRI for high throughput accurate macroscopic assessment of TME by radiomic approach. During surgery, tumor tissue samples will be collected and promptly frozen at -80°C for subsequent analysis. CRC tissue samples will be analyzed combining spatially resolved and single-cell transcriptomic approach, providing a sensitive and unbiased lens for identifying the key mechanisms of the interplay between CRC and immune context, preserving their tissue architecture. Our study involves the usage of Visium Cytassist Spatial Gene Expression, a powerful tool based on in situ capturing methods, providing the whole transcriptome information from tissue sections. Data collected by radiomics and tissue transcriptomics will undergo integrated analysis by a bioinformatic approach based on computational methods. TME will be macroscopically characterized on tumor images to map specific tissue areas of interest. By spatial tumor sections analysis, initial segregation of non-malignant TME cells from malignant ones will be performed and then the identification of differentially expressed genes and pathways between the two groups of patients will be finalized. These methodologies will allow the full characterization of CRC environment and will highlight possible differences between groups in TME macroscopic imaging features and gene expression. This will permit the discovery of possible specific tumor imaging-detected patterns and the associated molecular pathways specially promoted or deregulated in CKD patients with CRC. These evidences will enhance the value of possible prognostic parameters and the identification of early biomarkers of CRC and future development of targeted therapies. In the era of precision medicine, these goals appear relevant to address the increasing cost and social impact of both CRC and CKD.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

80

Start Date

2024-11-05

Completion Date

2026-08-31

Last Updated

2025-03-20

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (1)

Radiology Division

Naples, Italy