Recent advances in technology have allowed for the detection of cell-free DNA (cfDNA). cfDNA is tumor DNA that can be found in the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord (called cerebrospinal fluid or CSF) and in the blood of patients with brain tumors. The detection of cfDNA in blood and CSF is known as a "liquid biopsy" and is non-invasive, meaning it does not require a surgery or biopsy of tumor tissue. Multiple studies in other cancer types have shown that cfDNA can be used for diagnosis, to monitor disease response to treatment, and to understand the genetic changes that occur in brain tumors over time. Study doctors hope that by studying these tests in pediatric brain tumor patients, they will be able to use liquid biopsy in place of tests that have more risks for patients, like surgery. There is no treatment provided on this study. Patients who have CSF samples taken as part of regular care will be asked to provide extra samples for this study. The study doctor will collect a minimum of one extra tube of CSF (about 1 teaspoon or 5 mL) for this study. If the patients doctor thinks it is safe, up to 2 tubes of CSF (about 4 teaspoons or up to 20 mL) may be collected. CSF will be collected through the indwelling catheter device or through a needle inserted into the lower part of the patient's spine (known as a spinal tap or lumbar puncture). A required blood sample (about ½ a teaspoon or 2 3 mL) will be collected once at the start of the study. This sample will be used to help determine changes found in the CSF. Blood will be collected from the patient's central line or arm as a part of regular care. An optional tumor tissue if obtained within 8 weeks of CSF collection will be collected if available. Similarities between changes in the DNA of the tissue that has caused the tumor to form and grow with the cfDNA from CSF will be compared. This will help understand if CSF can be used instead of tumor tissue for diagnosis. Up to 300 people will take part in this study. This study will use genetic tests that may identify changes in the genes in the CSF. The report of the somatic mutations (the mutations that are found in the tumor only) will become part of the medical record. The results of the cfDNA sequencing will be shared with the patient. The study doctor will discuss what the results mean for the patient and patient's diagnosis and treatment. Looking for inheritable mutations in normal cells (blood) is not the purpose of this study. Genetic tests of normal blood can reveal information about the patient and also about the their relatives. The doctor will discuss what the tests results may mean for the patient and the their family. Patient may be monitored on this study for up to 5 years.
This is a multicenter study for children and young adults with primary brain tumor. All children and adolescent/young adult (AYA) patients 21 years of age are eligible. AYA patients \< 40 are eligible with a primary brain tumor entity more common in children than adults. Up to 300 people will take part in this study. Pediatric central nervous system (CNS) tumors represent a wide range of disorders and continue to be the leading cause of cancer-related death in children and adolescents. The past few years have led to a dramatic shift in the diagnosis and pathological classification of pediatric CNS tumors. Molecular biomarkers which are now being incorporated into treatment decisions and clinical trial design. With this, the need for longitudinal molecular monitoring of disease becomes increasingly evident. The anatomical challenges in accessing pediatric CNS malignancies coupled with the move toward molecular sub-classification and molecular targeted therapies leads to an urgent need to develop a non-invasive way to repeatedly sample these tumors. This would enable: 1) diagnose tumors that are surgically inaccessible; 2) monitor molecular changes in tumor longitudinally, including at progression and/or recurrence; and 3) develop non-invasive ways to monitor treatment responses. Recent advances in technology have allowed for the detection of cell-free tumor DNA (cfDNA), i.e., small fragments of tumor DNA, shed into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and bloodstream in brain tumor patients through a process known as "liquid biopsy". Based on the successful preliminary studies in adult glioma patients, this Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium (PBTC)-sponsored effort will attempt to integrate CSF cfDNA liquid biopsies into the clinical care of pediatric brain tumor patients across the PBTC to enhance tumor diagnosis/molecular subclassification and guide therapeutic decision making. This will be accomplished through centralized collection and processing of CSF cfDNA samples from patients with various types of pediatric CNS tumors across PBTC member sites. The primary objective will be to investigate the concordance between CSF cfDNA alterations and tumor DNA alterations in matched pairs to understand: 1) the concordance across matched samples; and 2) the genomic evolution that occurs over time across various tumor types. Additionally, the secondary objectives and exploratory objectives in this study are intended to aggregate data across various types of pediatric primary brain tumors to understand the rate of success of CSF cfDNA molecular profiling in different disease types and at various stages of disease, and to elucidate the role of CSF cfDNA profiling in guiding clinical decision making. The primary objective of this study is to estimate the concordance of mutations detected in the tumor tissue vs. cerebrospinal fluid cell free DNA (CSF cfDNA) across samples collected within 8 weeks of each other; determine whether clonal mutations are likely to be shared across sample types. Patients who have CSF samples taken as part of regular care will be asked to provide extra samples for this study. The study doctor will collect a minimum of one extra tube of CSF (about 1 teaspoon or 5 mL) for this study. If the patient's doctor thinks it is safe, up to 2 tubes of CSF (about 4 teaspoons or up to 20 mL) may be collected. A required blood sample (about ½ a teaspoon or 2 - 3 mL) will be collected once at the start of the study. An optional tumor tissue if obtained within 8 weeks of CSF collection will be collected if available. There is no treatment provided on this study.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
300
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Lucille Packard Children's Hospital Stanford University
Palo Alto, California, United States
Children's National Medical Center
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States
Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Nationwide Childrens Hospital
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Texas Children's Hospital
Houston, Texas, United States
Hospital for Sick Children
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Concordance of mutations across the tumor tissue vs. CSF
Within specific histologies with paired samples, estimate the concordance of mutation detected in the tumor tissue vs. cerebrospinal fluid cell free DNA (CSF cfDNA) across samples collected within 8 weeks of each other.
Time frame: 3 months
Estimate the frequency of detection of CSF cfDNA across different types of pediatric CNS tumors in association with various disease states.
Intra-patient matched samples of CSF and tissue will be summarized for each oncogenic alteration and scored as positive vs. negative.
Time frame: 3 months
Track and estimate the correlation between the levels of CSF cfDNA and disease response as determined by clinical and imaging criteria across different disease types.
Associations between the quantity of cfDNA and standard clinical and imaging disease response will be assessed by either Wilcoxon rank-sum or Spearman's correlations.
Time frame: 3 months
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