This research study is a prospective, single arm, pilot study, designed to evaluate the correlation between the immune and clinical responses of subjects with untreated Stage II-III triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) undergoing standard of care neoadjuvant chemo- immunotherapy.
Primary Objective: I. To determine whether standard of care neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy leads to the induction of a pro-inflammatory cytokine milieu (characterized by high IFN- γ, IFN-α, IL-6 and low TGF-β) in the blood which is induced within 24 hours of treatment initiation, persists through the course of the therapy and is associated with pathologic complete response in the tissue. Secondary Objectives: I. To determine whether the spatially resolved tissue TGF-β induced transcriptomic signatures or lack of innate interferon inducible genes/effector CD8 modules are abundant in tumors from TNBC patients that do not show pathologic complete response in the tissue at the end of standard of care neoadjuvant chemo- immunotherapy.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
10
Emory University/Winship Cancer Institute
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
RECRUITINGChange in the cytokine milieu in the blood
The change in the cytokine milieu specifically IFN-γ, IFN-α, IL-6 and TGF-β in the blood during standard of care neoadjuvant chemo-immunotherapy and its association with pathologic complete response in the tissue
Time frame: From baseline within 24 hours of surgery
Change in the transcriptomic signatures in the tissue
The transcriptomic signatures of TGF-β induced genes and innate interferon inducible genes/effector CD8 in the tissue specimens collected at baseline (archival tissue obtained prior to standard of care neoadjuvant chemo- immunotherapy) and after completion of treatment at the time of surgery.
Time frame: From baseline within 24 hours of surgery
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