The purpose of this study is to see if patients with cancer have a certain amount of genetic mutations in their blood. If certain levels of mutations are found in specific genes, patients may have a condition known as ARCH. The prevalence of ARCH is higher in cancer patients who received prior chemotherapy or radiation. Studying ARCH from your blood samples may also help researchers predict which patients are more likely to be prone to heart disease. Patients who are about to start chemotherapy/radiation, and patients who have completed chemotherapy/radiation will be approached to measure the incidence of ARCH. 5-10mL blood samples will be collected before and after treatment, and if ARCH is detected in a laboratory analysis, another blood sample will be collected. Patients with ARCH will repeat the blood collection yearly, and also be referred to a cardiology clinic for follow up.
This is a non-randomized, single-centre, observational study assessing the incidence of ARCH in cancer survivors. Patients over the age of 60 who had or will receive chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy for solid or hematologic malignancies at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre will be considered. Based on the time point of treatment, patients will either fall into a post or prior chemotherapy/radiation cohort. Peripheral blood will be taken and will be sequenced for ARCH DNA mutations. Patients who have ARCH-related mutations at a variable allele frequency (VAF) of at least 0.5% we will repeat the genetic sequencing yearly to assess changes in mutational spectrum and VAF over time.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
2,400
Blood samples will be tested for mutations, before patients are given Standard of Care chemotherapy/radiation or after given Standard of Care chemotherapy/radiation. Another testing is done after 3 months and after 1 year if positive for ARCH.
Princess Margaret Cancer Centre
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Referral to cardiology clinic
Time frame: 6-12 months
The incidence of ARCH stratified by tumor type.
Time frame: 6-12 months
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