RecruitingNCT07249060

Interferon Signature in Anti-CTLA-4 and Anti-PD-1/PD-L1-Treated Cancer Patients Compared With Systemic Autoimmune Disease Patients

Interferon Signature in Cancer Patients Treated With Anti-CTLA-4 and Anti-PD-1/PD-L1 Therapies: A Multicenter, Prospective, Observational Cohort Study Comparing Cancer Patients and Non-Cancer Patients With Systemic Autoimmune Diseases


Sponsor

Hospital Universitario Araba

Enrollment

300 participants

Start Date

Jan 8, 2024

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Conditions

Summary

This study aims to identify a way to predict the side effects that some people with cancer experience when receiving immunotherapy. These side effects, known as immune-related adverse events (irAEs), occur when the immune system mistakenly attacks healthy tissues, like certain autoimmune diseases. At present, clinicians lack reliable tests to determine who is most likely to develop these reactions. The goal of this study is to determine whether substances in the blood called interferons (IFNs) could serve as early warning markers. The study will include 300 people with cancer who are about to begin immunotherapy. To provide a meaningful comparison, the investigators will also enroll 40 individuals with autoimmune diseases such as lupus. Understanding how IFN levels differ between these groups may help clarify whether IFN patterns in cancer patients resemble those seen in autoimmune disease. Participants in both groups will be asked to provide small blood samples at predefined time points during their clinical care or treatment. Researchers will measure the levels of different IFN types in all samples to compare IFN levels between cancer patients and individuals with autoimmune diseases, and within the cancer group between patients who develop irAEs and those who do not. The long-term aim of the study is to develop a simple test that can help clinicians identify patients at higher risk of irAEs. Immune-related adverse events (irAEs) are a frequent complication in cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), and they often resemble or exacerbate preexisting autoimmune diseases. Despite extensive research in the field, no validated predictive biomarkers of irAEs currently exist. Emerging evidence suggests that the IFN signature -long implicated in the pathogenesis of several systemic autoimmune diseases (SADs)- may also be upregulated in patients who develop ICI-induced irAEs, likely with substantial overlap among different IFN subtypes. Given these clinical and molecular similarities with SADs, it is plausible that IFN levels in peripheral blood carry predictive value for irAE risk, although the dominant IFN types in ICI-related toxicity remain unknown. The INTER-AUTENTIC project aims to determine whether baseline IFN levels and their dynamic changes, measured in peripheral blood using a dedicated panel, can predict the onset of irAEs in cancer patients receiving ICIs. Supported by the Medical Oncology departments of six university hospitals in Northern Spain, this multicenter, observational, prospective cohort study has been underway since 2021. Biobank samples have been collected from ICI-treated patients before treatment initiation, at protocol-defined time points, and at the moment of irAE diagnosis (ICI cohort). The study seeks to identify the IFN subtypes with the most pronounced differential expression between patients with and without irAEs, and to evaluate whether IFN levels enhance the predictive performance of a model incorporating other clinical variables potentially associated with immune-mediated toxicity. A sample size of 300 cancer patients has been estimated for this analysis. In addition, a second prospective cohort of 40 non-cancer patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, primary Sjögren's syndrome, systemic sclerosis, and/or idiopathic inflammatory myopathy (SAD cohort) will be included. Since IFNs play a well-established pathogenic role in these conditions, this cohort will allow characterization of the IFN signature at key follow-up points (baseline, remission, and disease flare) and comparison with the IFN profiles of ICI-treated patients, regardless of whether they develop irAEs.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This observational study compares the immune system activity in cancer patients receiving checkpoint inhibitor therapy (drugs that help the immune system attack cancer) with patients who have autoimmune diseases. Researchers are studying a specific immune signal called the "interferon signature" to understand why some patients develop immune-related side effects during cancer treatment. **You may be eligible if...** - Cancer patients: You are 18 or older and are about to start checkpoint inhibitor therapy for the first time - Autoimmune disease patients: You are 18 or older with lupus, Sjögren's syndrome, scleroderma, or inflammatory muscle disease, and are not on high-dose immune suppression **You may NOT be eligible if...** - Your expected survival is less than 3 months from the start of treatment - You are currently receiving chemotherapy, targeted therapy, or other anticancer treatments alongside checkpoint therapy - You have a severe autoimmune condition contraindicating checkpoint therapy (cancer cohort) - You are on more than 10 mg/day of prednisone or equivalent immunosuppressants - You have a recent cancer diagnosis (autoimmune cohort) or are on active cancer treatment Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGImmune Checkpoint Inhibitors

Administration of immune checkpoint inhibitors according to protocol


Locations(1)

Hospital Universitario de Navarra

Pamplona, Navarre, Spain

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NCT07249060


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