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Brief Title: Stratifying Risk in Barrett's Esophagus: A Pilot Study for Biomarker-based Patient Management
Official Title: Stratifying Risk in Barrett's Esophagus: A Pilot Study for Biomarker-based Patient Management
Study ID: NCT02075905
Brief Summary: Subjects enrolled in this study will have biopsies obtained and sent to Dr. Fitzgerald's lab for analysis of a validated biomarker panel. Subjects will be stratified to either high or low risk of progression to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC) based on biomarker panel results. Biomarker panel results will not be communicated to sites. Subjects with low grade dysplasia will be offered the option of treatment (radiofrequency ablation (RFA)) as part of routine care. Subjects with low grade dysplasia who do not want RFA and subjects with no dysplasia will receive surveillance endoscopy in 1 year per routine care. All subjects will be administered a questionnaire seeking information about hypothetical willingness to be randomized to treatment or surveillance.
Detailed Description: The Investigators have previously completed a validation study in which they have identified a panel of biomarkers that can predict progression of subjects with BE and no dysplasia or low-grade dysplasia to esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). The biomarker panel, performed by the Fitzgerald lab, included ploidy (by image cytometry), AOL (histochemistry (IHC)), p53 (IHC), cyclin A (IHC), and dysplasia. These markers have been validated and demonstrated to be highly predictive of both progression to EAC, as well as the presence of occult malignancy elsewhere in the specimen (field effect). The final panel of validated biomarkers will be used in this study to identify patients at high risk of developing EAC. The study will recruit 100 patients across 4 sites (University of North Carolina, Case Western Reserve University, University of Cambridge, and Academic Medical Center in Amsterdam). The specific aims of this pilot study are to: 1. Demonstrate that the international, multicenter team can work together, 2. Define the logistics of assaying biomarkers in real time such that in the future interventional trial, results could influence clinical decision-making, and, 3. Provide further data to inform a power calculation for the full trial. Subjects enrolled in the study will complete a questionnaire gathering hypothetical willingness to be randomized to receive endoscopic treatment intervention (RFA) or surveillance endoscopy. Biopsy samples will be obtained from all subjects and tested for all biomarkers in the panel. Results of the biomarker panel will not be communicated to sites. Subjects with low grade dysplasia will be offered the option of receiving radiofrequency ablation (RFA) as part of routine care. Subjects with low grade dysplasia who agree to RFA will receive RFA as part of routine care. Subjects with no dysplasia and subjects with low grade dysplasia who do not want to receive RFA will receive a surveillance endoscopy in 1 year as part of routine care. The goals of this pilot study are to ascertain the proportion of subjects in the high risk arm, to demonstrate the plausibility of performing the biomarker analysis efficiently in a sizable group of patients, to demonstrate the feasibility of delivering the endoscopic intervention (RFA), to obtain 1 year pilot data regarding progression in the high risk arm for use in sample size calculations, and to document collaboration among the centers.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, , Netherlands
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, , United Kingdom
Name: Nicholas J Shaheen, MD, MPH
Affiliation: UNC-Chapel Hill
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR