Cancer-associated Muscle Mass - Molecular Factors and Exercise Mechanisms (PANACEA)
Identifying Molecular Factors Contributing to Cancer-associated Muscle Mass Loss and Providing Clinical Evidence for Exercise Mechanisms to Functionally Restore Muscle in Cancer
Muscle mass loss is a common adverse effect of cancer. Muscle mass loss occurs with or without reduction in body weight. Cancer cachexia (CC) is the involuntary loss of body weight of >5% within 6 months and it occurs in 50-80% of patients with metastatic cancer.
It is estimated that CC is a direct cause of up to 30% of all cancer-related deaths. No treatment currently is available to prevent CC, likely because the chemical reactions that causes of this devastating phenomenon in unknown.
No treatment currently is available to prevent muscle mass loss in patients with cancer but is urgently needed as the reduced muscle mass and function is associated with impaired physical function, reduced tolerance to anticancer therapy, poor quality of life (QoL), and reduced survival. There is evidence of an interdependence between informal caregiver (e.g. spouse) and patient QoL. Thus, identifying caregiver distress and needs can potentially benefit QoL for patients with cancer cachexia. Despite the enormous impact on disease outcomes, it is not known why the loss of muscle mass and function occurs and very few studies have investigated the underlying molecular causes in humans. In particular, there is a severe lack of studies that have obtained human skeletal muscle and adipose tissue sample material. Such reference sample materials will be invaluable to obtaining in-depth molecular information about the underlying molecular causes of the involuntary but common muscle mass and fat mass loss in cancer.
At a whole body level, cancer cachexia is associated with reduced sensitivity to the hormone insulin, high levels of lipids in the blood, and inflammation. Within the skeletal muscle, the muscle mass loss is associated with elevated protein breakdown and reduced protein build-up while emerging, yet, limited data also suggest malfunction of the power plants of the cells called mitochondrions. The role of malnutrition and how it contributes to weight loss is understood only to the extent of the observed loss of appetite and the reduced food intake because of pain, nausea, candidiasis of the mouth, and breathlessness. Evidence is increasing that the environment of the intestinal system could be implicated in cancer cachexia, yet, the possible effect of cancer and the cancer treatment on the intestinal environment is not understood. Thus, large and as yet poorly understood details of this syndrome precede a later weight loss.
Exercise training could help restore muscle function and how the chemical reactions works in cancer. In healthy people, and patients with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and obesity exercise potently improves health. Exercise has been thought to slow down the unwanted effects of cancer cachexia by changing the reactions mentioned above. Thus, there is a tremendous gap in our knowledge of how and if exercise can restore the cells power plants function, muscle mass, strength, and hormone sensitivity in human cachexic skeletal muscle. Tackling that problem and examining potential mechanisms, will enable us to harness the benefits of exercise for optimizing the treatment of patients with cancer.
The data will provide novel clinical knowledge on cachexia in cancer and therefore addressing a fundamental societal problem.
Three specific aims will be addressed in corresponding work packages (WPs):
- investigate the involvement of hormone sensitivity of insulin and measure the chemical reactions between the cells in patients with lung cancer (NSCLC) and describe the physical performance and measure amount of e.g. muscles and adipose tissue across the 1st type of cancer treatment and understand how that is related to the disease and how patients and informal caregiver feel (WP1).
- find changes in the chemical reactions in skeletal muscle, adipose tissue (AT), and blood samples in these patients, to understand how to predict how the disease will develop (WP2).
- measure changes of skeletal muscle tissue in response to exercise and see if it might reverse the hormone insensitivity and improve muscle signaling and function (WP3).
The investigators believe that:
- the majority of patients with advanced lung cancer, at the time of diagnosis already are in a cachectic state, where they lose appetite, and have hormonal changes, and an overall altered chemical actions between the cells affecting both muscle mass and AT. The investigators propose that all this can predict how the disease will progress, and how patient- and informal caregiver fell and how they rate their quality of life.
- lung cancer and the treatment thereof is linked with changes in the blood, the muscle tissues, and the adipose tissues, especially in patients experiencing cachexia, that could be targeted to develop new treatment.
- exercise can restore the muscles and improve insulin sensitivity and improve the function of the cells power plants in patients with lung cancer-associated muscle problems.
Study Overview
Status
Status
Conditions
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Intervention / Treatment
Study Type
Study Type
Enrollment (Anticipated)
Enrollment
Phase
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Contact
Study Contact
- Name: Jonas Sørensen, MD.
- Phone Number: 0045-51513480
- Email: jonas.soerensen@sund.ku.dk
Study Contact Backup
- Name: Lykke Sylow, Ass.proff
- Email: lykkesylow@sund.ku.dk
Study Locations
-
-
DK
-
Copenhagen, DK, Denmark, 2100
- Recruiting
- University of Copenhagen
-
Contact:
- Lykke Sylow, PhD
- Phone Number: 0045 20955250
- Email: Lykkesylow@sund.ku.dk
-
-
Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion Criteria, WP1+WP2X+WP2:
- Men and women at or above the age of 18
- Histological and radiological verified NSCLC (both squamous and adenocarcinoma) st. IIIb/IV stage not eligible to concurrent chemo/radiation therapy as primary treatment
- Referred for 1st line palliative anticancer therapy (platin based, immunotherapy, combined therapy or TKI), this goes for WP1 + WP2
- Referred for palliative anticancer therapy (platin based, immunotherapy, combined therapy or TKI), for recurrent cancer, this goes only for WP2X.
- Having a staging/baseline CT within 4 weeks of initiation of treatment (PET/CT are also allowed), or a baseline scan planned within the first week of treatment.
- ECOG Performance Status 0-2
- Having signed the informed consent form
Exclusion Criteria, WP1+WP2X+WP2:
- Any other known malignancy requiring active treatment (prior cancer diagnosis is not some exclusion criteria if oncology-treatment is completed)
- Local palliative radiotherapy as primary treatment
- ECOG Performance status > 2
- Physical disabilities excluding physical testing
- Inability to understand Danish
- Inability to understand scoring systems/patient-reported outcome measures
Inclusion Criteria, WP3:
- Men and women above the age of 18
- Histological and radiological verified NSCLC (both squamous and adenocarcinoma) st. IIIb/IV stage
- ECOG Performance Status 0-2
- Having signed the informed consent form.
Exclusion Criteria, WP3:
- Any other known malignancy requiring active treatment (prior cancer diagnosis is not some exclusion criteria if oncology-treatment is completed)
- ECOG Performance Status > 2
- Physical disabilities excluding physical testing
- Inability to understand Danish
- Inability to understand scoring systems/patient-reported outcome measures
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Basic Science
- Allocation: N/A
- Interventional Model: Single Group Assignment
- Masking: None (Open Label)
Number of Arms
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / ArmParticipant Group / Arm |
Intervention / TreatmentIntervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
|
Experimental: WP1-3
WP1+2: no intervention WP3: exercise training as intervention
|
Patients will be enrolled in a 8 week, supervised, single-leg kicking training intervention (1h, or as long as possible, 60-70% peak workload (PWL), 2-5 days a week).
Healthy age-, body weight-, gender- and activity level-matched control subjects will undertake the intervention matched to the %PWL obtained by the patients who complete the study.
|
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Disease outcome
Time Frame: 12 weeks
|
according to RECIST criteria where disease status is placed into four different groups (Complete Response, Partial Response, Stable Disease, or Progressive Disease)
|
12 weeks
|
|
Muscle mass
Time Frame: 12 weeks
|
changes in L3 CT-derived skeletal muscle index (SMI) (cm2/m2)
|
12 weeks
|
Secondary Outcome Measures
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Insulin sensitivity status
Time Frame: 8 weeks
|
Glucose infusion rate during the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp to ascertai the insulin sensitivity
|
8 weeks
|
|
Proteomic changes in skeletal muscle
Time Frame: 12 weeks
|
Skeletal muscle biopsies from vastus lateralis muscle will be analyzed using mass spectronomy to determine proteomic chances in response to non-small cell lung cancer in skeletal muscle.
|
12 weeks
|
|
Patient-reported Quality-of-Life (QoL)
Time Frame: 12 weeks
|
Total Quality-of-Life score on The European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30.
Fom 1 (very poor) to 7 (excellent).
|
12 weeks
|
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Sponsor
Collaborators
Collaborators
Investigators
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Lykke Sylow, Ass.proff., University of Copenhagen
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start (Actual)
Study Start
Primary Completion (Anticipated)
Primary Completion
Study Completion (Anticipated)
Study Completion
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (Actual)
First Posted
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Actual)
Last Update Posted
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
Other Study ID Numbers
- 2447473
Drug and device information, study documents
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
Clinical Trials on Neoplasms
-
NCT07331532RecruitingBreast Neoplasms、Lung Neoplasms、Pancreatic Neoplasms
-
NCT07428213Not yet recruiting
-
NCT07173985RecruitingColonic Neoplasms
-
NCT06338332RecruitingColonic Neoplasms Malignant
-
NCT00985036WithdrawnGlioma | Meningioma
-
NCT07557212Not yet recruiting
-
NCT00179881CompletedBrain Stem Neoplasms, Primary | Neoplasms, Brain Stem
Clinical Trials on Exercise training
-
NCT01691131Completed
-
NCT03419195CompletedHealthy | Overweight | Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus | Cardiovascular Risk Factor
-
NCT01721863CompletedAtrial Fibrillation
-
NCT03963050RecruitingCognitive Impairment | Sarcopenia | Frailty Syndrome
-
NCT01209637CompletedImpact of Intensive Exercise Training on Coronary Collateral Circulation in Patients With Stable CADStable Coronary Artery Disease
-
NCT01038960CompletedVentricular Tachycardia
-
NCT01170598CompletedAcute Myeloid Leukemia
-
NCT03607058Completed