Proteomics and Radiomics Research of Breast Cancer Markers in Tissue, Interstitial Fluid and Serum

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

The current study is a case control study involving comparisons of tissue interstitial fluid from breast cancer and adjacent non-cancerous tissue as well as that from benign breast lesion and its adjacent non-diseased tissue for a distinguishable breast cancer profile. The purpose of this research is to collect fresh breast nodule/cancer and surrounding non-cancerous tissue for proteomic studies of the interstitial fluid to identify a profile distinguishing breast cancer which will also permit future research on stored interstitial fluid, blood or tissue samples. Specific markers identified from interstitial fluid study will be investigated in blood samples to develop serum markers for breast cancer diagnosis and prognosis. Additionally, we will perform both prospective and retrospective research on breast cancer involving clinical, demographic, epidemiologic information, treatment, follow-up and outcomes on breast nodule/cancer cases collected.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• All subjects ≥ 18 years of age undergoing surgery for indeterminate breast nodules, breast tissue reduction, prophylactic mastectomy, and all subjects with newly diagnosed invasive breast cancer will be eligible to participate. If invasive breast cancer or suspicion of invasive breast cancer, target lesion must measure ≥ 1.0 cm on breast imaging before core biopsy.

Locations
United States
Pennsylvania
UPMC St. Margaret
RECRUITING
Pittsburgh
Contact Information
Primary
Laura Chiesa
powersl2@upmc.edu
412-831-1320
Backup
Min Sun, MD, PhD
sunxmx@UPMC.EDU
412-781-3744
Time Frame
Start Date: 2010-02-03
Estimated Completion Date: 2028-04
Participants
Target number of participants: 300
Authors
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Leads: University of Pittsburgh
Collaborators: David Scaife Foundation

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov