An international, multicenter study to identify tumor molecular particularities and neoepitopes among participants with colorectal and pancreatic tumors undergoing surgery.
Colorectal and pancreatic cancers are among the most common causes of cancer-related death over the world. Standard of care treatment for colon and pancreas cancer is stage dependent and includes surgical, chemotherapeutic, and radiation therapy. However, the current statistics underlines an urgent need for improved treatment. Patient-individualized treatments and enhancement of the immune response via vaccination are among new therapeutic options. The enhancement of the immune response via vaccination is among new therapeutic options. Here, either cell-specific antigens, over-expressed tumor specific antigens or mutated tumor-specific antigens (neoepitopes) can be employed. Especially the latter possess the biggest potential for high specificity but presuppose an extensive characterization of the respective tumor. In order to identify a neoepitope-based vaccination approach for patient-individualized treatment options the molecular particularities of tumors have to be analysed. The aim of this study is to identify tumor molecular particularities and neoepitopes among patients with colorectal and pancreatic tumors undergoing surgery.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
Teaching Hospital UOL Cancer Center
Lahore, Pakistan
Identification of tumor specific mutations on the genomic level
Identification of tumor specific mutations on the genomic level using whole exome sequencing and/or whole genome sequencing
Time frame: 24 months
Identification of tumor specific mutations on transcriptional and/or translational level
Direct comparison of tumor and non-tumor tissue to identify somatic mutations through RNA sequencing and proteomics analysis
Time frame: 24 months
Identification of neo-antigens epitopes at protein level
Identification of neo-antigens epitopes at protein level via mass spectrography
Time frame: 24 months
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