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Spots Global Cancer Trial Database for Investigating Atezolizumab in Newly Diagnosed ER Positive Breast Cancer Patients According to Their AdipOsity

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Trial Identification

Brief Title: Investigating Atezolizumab in Newly Diagnosed ER Positive Breast Cancer Patients According to Their AdipOsity

Official Title: Investigating Atezolizumab in Newly Diagnosed Endocrine Receptor Positive Breast Cancer Patients According to Their AdipOsity (AteBrO)

Study ID: NCT04630210

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Study Description

Brief Summary: One out of 8 women will develop breast cancer (BC) in her lifetime and despite improvements in therapeutic strategies it remains one of the main causes of cancer-related mortality for women in industrialized countries. Over the past decades another worldwide health problem has emerged: obesity. Around 50% of European women are either overweight or obese (body mass index (BMI)≥25 kg/m2: overweight; BMI≥30 kg/m2: obese). The global health effects of high BMI include the well-known elevated risk for developing cardiovascular disease and diabetes and a broad range of cancers, including in the breast. The connection between BC and obesity is gaining attention because of its clinical relevance. Heavier BC patients are generally older and tend to present with more aggressive disease (larger tumours and more frequent axillary lymph node dissemination). Likewise, they are also at higher risk of recurrence and resistance to therapy. This is of high importance, as development of therapy-resistant metastases is the ultimate cause of death in relapsing patients. Several molecular pathways linking the more aggressive BC nature to obesity have been proposed, such as oestrogens and fat cell signalling molecules, insulin signalling, metabolic inflammation and altered lipid metabolism. Adiposity is hardly taken into consideration in the treatment of BC patients. This is in contrast with the emerging trend to develop personalized therapies based on individual characteristics of the patient and molecular features of the tumour. Very recent data show that the upcoming treatment strategy of immunotherapy (IT) has better outcomes in obese patients in melanoma, renal cell and lung carcinoma. This could be explained by the fact that obesity induces T-cell dysregulation, which makes these patients more sensitive to IT. Whether or not this accounts for BC as well, is currently unknown. In endocrine BC treatment, research on the effect of BMI on treatment resistance is mainly retrospective and it is unclear whether heavier patients would present a differential benefit to aromatase inhibitors compared to lean patients. Also, most of these studies only considered BMI and no additional adiposity-related inflammation and other variables. Here, we therefore want to prospectively evaluate the local and systemic effects of aromatase inhibition and immunotherapy, either combined or alone, in a window of opportunity study carried out in luminal B like postmenopausal BC patients.

Detailed Description:

Keywords

Eligibility

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT

Sex: FEMALE

Healthy Volunteers: No

Locations

Contact Details

Name: Hans Wildiers, MD PhD

Affiliation: UZ Leuven

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Useful links and downloads for this trial

Clinicaltrials.gov

Google Search Results

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