Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women worldwide, with approximately 604,000 new cases in 2020.Treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer is based on a combination of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. The response to concomitant chemoradiotherapy vary from one woman to another. Predicting the response to these treatments would allow early consideration of alternative therapies for patients identified as less responsive to standard treatments. A 5-year recurrence-free survival is approximately 79% for stages IB and IIA and 59% for stages III and IVA, with approximately 36% of local failures despite chemoradiotherapy. In a few studies,the radiomic MRI approach in locally advanced cervical cancers has shown to be prognostic for locoregional recurrence or survival but these models still need to be explored and validated.The EPICOL cohort, a clinical-biological cohort of 136 patients treated with chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced cervical cancer at the Montpellier Cancer Institute or Nîmes University Hospital, will be used to develop a predictive model of response to chemoradiotherapy based on radiomic data from pelvic MRIs before and after treatment.
Cervical cancer is an invasive cancer that develops from the squamous epithelium of the cervix. Worldwide, cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women, with approximately 604,000 new cases in 2020.Treatment for locally advanced cervical cancer (FIGO stage IB3 to IVA) is based on a combination of radiotherapy and chemotherapy (cisplatin 40 mg/m2 x5 or 6 or carboplatin area under the curve 2 if cisplatin is contraindicated). Responses to concomitant chemoradiotherapy remain highly heterogeneous from one woman to another, and predicting the response to these treatments would allow early consideration of alternative therapies for patients identified as less responsive to standard treatments. Indeed, 5-year recurrence-free survival is approximately 79% for stages IB and IIA and 59% for stages III and IVA, with approximately 36% of local failures despite chemoradiotherapy. The radiomic MRI approach in locally advanced cervical cancers has shown in a few studies to be prognostic for locoregional recurrence or survival. However, these models still need to be explored and validated before they can be implemented in routine clinical practice. The EPICOL cohort is a clinical-biological cohort of 136 patients treated with chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced cervical cancer at the Montpellier Cancer Institute or Nîmes University Hospital. The aim is to develop a predictive model of response to chemoradiotherapy based on radiomic data from pelvic MRIs before and after treatment from the EPICOL cohort.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
Nimes University Hospital
Nîmes, Gard, France
RECRUITINGPrognostic role of a magnetic resonance imaging radiomic model on progression-free survival in patients treated for locally advanced cervical cancer.
Time from diagnosis to death from any cause or progression (according to RECIST v1.1 criteria) at 24 months of follow-up.
Time frame: Month 24
Prognostic role of an magnetic resonance imaging radiomic model on overall survival in patients treated for locally advanced cervical cancer.
Time between treatment initiation and death from any cause at 24 months of follow-up.
Time frame: Month 24
Correlation between the radiomic magnetic imaging radiomic model and Programmed cell Death protein 1 (PD-L1) expression.
Collection of Programmed cell Death protein 1 (PD-L1) expression levels from biopsies from the EPICOL cohort.
Time frame: Month 24
Correlation between the radiomic magnetic resonance imaging model and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs).
Collection of tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) expression levels in biopsies from the EPICOL cohort.
Time frame: Month 24
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