Beta-Blockers on Neoadjuvant Immunochemotherapy for Hypertensive Patients With Gastric Cancer (BNIHGC)
Beta-blockers Combined With Neoadjuvant Immunochemotherapy Significantly Improve Pathological Remission in Locally Advanced Gastric Cancer: a Multicenter Controlled Study Based on Hypertensive Patients
Study Population: Patients with locally advanced gastric cancer complicated by primary hypertension, who received neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy followed by curative gastrectomy at Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University and other participating centers between April 2021 and December 2025.
Primary Objective: To investigate the impact of beta-blocker use versus non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents on the efficacy of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer and hypertension.
Secondary Objective: To investigate the impact of beta-blocker use versus non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents on the incidence of immune-related adverse events (irAEs).
Study Groups: Patients are divided into two groups based on antihypertensive medication use during immunotherapy: the exposed group (patients continuously using beta-blockers during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy) and the control group (patients continuously receiving non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents, including ACEI/ARB, CCB, or diuretics, during the same period).
Study Design: This is a multicenter, retrospective, observational cohort study.
Study Duration: May 2026 - December 2026
Sample Size: A total of 80 eligible patients are planned for inclusion, with 40 patients in the beta-blocker exposed group and 40 patients in the non-beta-blocker control group.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Voluntarily provided informed consent for data use;
- Age between 18 and 85 years;
- No restriction on gender;
- Histopathologically confirmed gastric adenocarcinoma from the primary lesion via endoscopic biopsy, according to the 15th edition of the Japanese Classification of Gastric Carcinoma (2017);
- Received neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy followed by curative gastrectomy between April 2021 and December 2025.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women;
- Severe psychiatric disorders;
- Previous history of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or targeted therapy;
- History of other malignant tumors within the past 5 years;
- dMMR or MSI-H status determined by immunohistochemistry or PCR-based assays
- Active infection, active/refractory autoimmune disease, or uncontrolled systemic disease;
- Patients judged by the investigator to be unsuitable for participation in this study.
調査の概要
状態
条件
詳細な説明
Research Background 1.1 Disease Burden of Gastric Cancer, Hypertension Comorbidity and Treatment Challenges Gastric carcinoma (GC) is one of the most common malignant tumors worldwide, ranking fifth in incidence and fourth in mortality globally. A large proportion of GC patients in China are diagnosed at an advanced stage, leading to short survival and poor quality of life. Notably, hypertension is one of the most prevalent comorbidities in advanced GC patients, with clinical data showing that approximately 30%-40% of such patients have primary hypertension. These patients not only face difficulties in blood pressure control due to excessive sympathetic nervous system activation, but also suffer from a deteriorated tumor microenvironment caused by abnormal neuro-immune crosstalk.
In recent years, immune checkpoint inhibitors (e.g., PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors) have brought new hope for advanced GC treatment by relieving tumor-induced immune suppression and activating the body's anti-tumor immune response, demonstrating significant efficacy in a subset of patients. However, only 10%-15% of GC patients achieve long-term benefits from current immunotherapy, and the response rate may be even lower in patients with hypertension due to sympathetic activation. Most patients still develop primary or acquired resistance. This low response rate has driven research into combination strategies to enhance immunotherapy efficacy, and the potential immunomodulatory effects of beta-blockers (BBs), a commonly used antihypertensive drug, have become a research focus.
1.2 Core Role of Sympathetic Nervous System Regulation in the Tumor Microenvironment and the Impact of Hypertension With advances in tumor immunology, the immunosuppressive role of the sympathetic nervous system in the tumor microenvironment has been gradually revealed. In GC patients with hypertension, persistent excessive sympathetic activation caused by long-term abnormal blood pressure releases large amounts of catecholamine neurotransmitters (mainly norepinephrine), forming a tumor immunosuppressive cycle that critically impairs immunotherapy efficacy.
Basic research has confirmed that norepinephrine participates in tumor immune escape by binding to β-adrenergic receptors (ADRBs, especially the ADRB1 subtype) on immune cells. A 2024 study published in *Nature* by the Salk Institute revealed that exhausted CD8⁺ cytotoxic T cells highly express ADRB1, making them highly sensitive to norepinephrine, which inhibits T cell proliferation and reduces effector molecule secretion, ultimately leading to T cell exhaustion. A landmark study in *Science* further elucidated this mechanism: norepinephrine activates the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway through ADRB1, inducing high expression of exhaustion markers such as PD-1 and TIM-3 on T cells and weakening anti-tumor immune responses. Beta-blockers can competitively block ADRB1 and reverse T cell exhaustion, providing direct mechanistic support for their combination with immunotherapy. In addition, the nerve density in gastric cancer tissues is significantly higher than that in normal tissues, and increased catecholamine release in patients with hypertension further enhances ADRB-mediated immunosuppression and exacerbates T cell exhaustion, laying an important theoretical foundation for targeting the β-receptor pathway.
1.3 Anti-Tumor Mechanisms, Clinical Evidence of Beta-Blockers and Research Gaps As classic cardiovascular drugs, beta-blockers are mainly used for the treatment of primary hypertension. By blocking β-adrenergic receptors to inhibit excessive catecholamine signaling, they not only control blood pressure but also exert potential anti-tumor effects by regulating immunosuppressive pathways in the tumor microenvironment.
Numerous basic experiments and clinical studies have verified the anti-tumor activity of BBs: non-selective beta-blockers can inhibit the proliferation of gastric cancer cells and induce apoptosis in animal models; catecholamines released by host sympathetic activation can suppress CD8⁺ T cell activity via ADRB-mediated cAMP/PKA signaling, while BBs can enhance the efficacy of PD-1 inhibitors by upregulating PD-L1 expression on tumor-associated macrophages and blocking the synergistic inhibitory signals of the LRRC33/TGFβ1 axis and PD-1. In head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and non-small cell lung cancer, the combination of BBs and immunotherapy can improve patient survival, but relevant clinical data in gastric cancer remain limited.
Our team previously enrolled 25 eligible patients from 5 hospitals across China, all of whom underwent radical resection. The distribution of postoperative pathological tumor regression grade (TRG) was as follows: TRG 0 in 10 patients (40%), TRG 1 in 4 patients (16%), TRG 2 in 11 patients (44%), and TRG 3 in 0 patients. The proportion of TRG 0/1 (pathological complete or near-complete response) was 56% (14/25), comparable to the immunotherapy plus chemotherapy group of the NEOSUMMIT-01 study; the proportion of TRG 3 (pathological non-response) was 0, significantly lower than the same group of the NEOSUMMIT-01 study. No serious beta-blocker-related adverse events were observed during treatment in the cohort.
Based on the above research background and unresolved questions, this study intends to use a nationwide multicenter retrospective cohort data of advanced GC patients with primary hypertension, compare the efficacy of beta-blockers versus non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents during immunotherapy, and systematically evaluate the unique synergistic effect of beta-blockers. This study aims to provide high-level evidence for combination immunotherapy strategies in GC patients with hypertension, and promote the development of neuro-immuno-oncology in gastric cancer, opening a new avenue to improve the prognosis of this special patient population.
Study Objectives 2.1 Primary Objective To investigate the impact of combined use of beta-blockers (compared with non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents) on the efficacy of immunotherapy in patients with advanced gastric cancer complicated by primary hypertension.
2.2 Secondary Objective To investigate the impact of combined use of beta-blockers (compared with non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents) on the incidence of immune-related adverse events (irAEs).
Study Design This is a retrospective, multicenter, observational study. Eligible gastric cancer patients with primary hypertension who received neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy combined with immunotherapy followed by gastrectomy at Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University and other participating centers between April 2021 and December 2025, with complete follow-up data, will be enrolled.
Patients will be divided into an exposed group and a non-exposed group according to the use of beta-blockers antihypertensive drugs during immunotherapy:
- Exposed group: Patients who continuously used beta-blockers during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy
- Control group: Patients who continuously received non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents (e.g., ACEI/ARB/CCB, diuretics, observation) during the same period Propensity score matching (PSM) will be used to control baseline confounding factors, including age, metastatic burden, CPS score, number of immunotherapy cycles, and hypertension grade.
No randomization or study protocol-driven treatment will be administered to participants. All treatment decisions and regimens will be determined by the treating physician based on clinical indications.
Study Population The study population consists of patients with locally advanced gastric cancer complicated by hypertension who are scheduled to undergo laparoscopic gastrectomy after immunotherapy.
4.1 Diagnostic Criteria
- Gastric cancer diagnosed in accordance with the 15th edition of the Japanese Classification of Gastric Carcinoma (2017)
- Hypertension diagnosed in accordance with the Chinese Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Hypertension 2023 (systolic blood pressure ≥140 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure ≥90 mmHg)
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria 5.1 Inclusion Criteria
- Age 18-85 years
- No gender restriction
- Histopathologically confirmed gastric adenocarcinoma from the primary gastric lesion via endoscopic biopsy, according to the 15th edition of the Japanese Classification of Gastric Carcinoma(2017)
- Patients who received neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy followed by gastrectomy at Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University and other participating centers between April 2021 and December 2025 5.2 Exclusion Criteria
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- Severe psychiatric disorders
- Previous history of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or targeted therapy
- History of other malignant tumors within the past 5 years
- dMMR or MSI-H status determined by immunohistochemistry or PCR-based assays
- Active infection, active or refractory autoimmune disease, or uncontrolled systemic disease
- Patients judged by the investigator to be unsuitable for this study
- Sample Size This study is designed as an observational study. A total of 80 eligible patients admitted to the Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery at Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University and other participating centers between April 2021 and December 2025 will be enrolled, with 40 patients in each of the beta-blocker exposed group and the non-exposed group.
Data Collection Procedures
Data collection will be conducted in three phases:
7.1 Baseline Phase (First Patient Visit)
- Demographic data: gender, age, patient initials
- Medical history and physical examination: height, weight, BMI, underlying diseases, ID number, hospital record number, operation date 7.2 Routine Diagnosis and Treatment Phase
- Laboratory test results: pathological tumor stage, pathological type, histological type, tumor size, tumor location, pathological TRG grade, immunotherapy-related immunohistochemical indicators (CPS, EBER, HER2, PMS2, MLH1, MSH2, MSH6)
- Imaging findings: abdominal computed tomography (CT)
- Antihypertensive medication data: start time, duration, type and dosage of beta-blockers and non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents 7.3 Follow-up Phase A 3-year telephone follow-up will be performed once a year to record overall survival (OS) and recurrence-free survival (RFS).
- Ethical Considerations This study is conducted in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki and relevant ethical regulations. All data will be anonymized to protect patient privacy, and no additional interventions or risks will be introduced to participants due to the retrospective observational design.
研究の種類
入学 (推定)
連絡先と場所
研究場所
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Guangdong
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Guangzhou、Guangdong、中国、510515
- Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University
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参加基準
適格基準
就学可能な年齢
- 大人
- 高齢者
健康ボランティアの受け入れ
サンプリング方法
調査対象母集団
説明
Inclusion Criteria:
- Aged between 18 and 85 years;
- No restriction on gender;
- Patients with a standardized histopathological diagnosis of gastric adenocarcinoma from the primary gastric lesion via endoscopic biopsy, according to the 15th edition of the Japanese Classification of Gastric Carcinoma (2017);
- Patients who received neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy followed by curative gastrectomy at Nanfang Hospital of Southern Medical University and other participating centers between April 2021 and December 2025.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women;
- Severe psychiatric disorders;
- Previous history of chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or targeted therapy prior to study treatment;
- History of other malignant tumors within the past 5 years;
- dMMR or MSI-H status determined by immunohistochemistry or PCR-based assays
- Active infection, active or refractory autoimmune disease, or uncontrolled systemic disease;
- Patients judged by the investigator to be unsuitable for participation in this study.
研究計画
研究はどのように設計されていますか?
デザインの詳細
コホートと介入
グループ/コホート |
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Beta-blocker exposed group
Patients with locally advanced gastric cancer complicated by primary hypertension, who continuously received beta-blockers (e.g., metoprolol, bisoprolol) for antihypertensive treatment during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy, followed by curative gastrectomy.
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Non-beta-blocker control group
Patients with locally advanced gastric cancer complicated by primary hypertension, who continuously received non-beta-blocker antihypertensive agents (e.g., ACEI/ARB, CCB, diuretics) for blood pressure control during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy, with no exposure to beta-blockers, followed by curative gastrectomy.
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この研究は何を測定していますか?
主要な結果の測定
結果測定 |
メジャーの説明 |
時間枠 |
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病理学的反応のMPR
時間枠:術前補助化学療法の完了から外科的切除まで;手術後約1週間の術後病理検体で評価され、研究治療開始後最大4ヶ月まで。
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主要病理学的応答(MPR)は、術前治療後に外科的に切除された原発腫瘍において残存する生きた腫瘍細胞が10%以下の患者の割合と定義されます。
MPRは、術前治療完了後約1週間で得られた手術標本に基づいて評価されます。
病理学的評価は標準化された腫瘍退縮度(TRG)システムに従って行われ、AJCC第8版基準に基づくTRG 0-1(すなわち、完全応答または最小限の残存病変)がMPRに対応します。
このエンドポイントは、点推定値と95%信頼区間を用いて記述的に報告されます。
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術前補助化学療法の完了から外科的切除まで;手術後約1週間の術後病理検体で評価され、研究治療開始後最大4ヶ月まで。
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二次結果の測定
結果測定 |
メジャーの説明 |
時間枠 |
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Pathological Complete Response (pCR) Rate
時間枠:Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy).
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Pathological complete response (pCR) is defined as the proportion of patients with no viable tumor cells remaining in the primary tumor bed and lymph nodes (TRG 0, ypT0N0) on postoperative pathological specimens, evaluated per AJCC 8th edition criteria.
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Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy).
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Pathological Non-Response (TRG 3) Rate
時間枠:Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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Pathological non-response is defined as the proportion of patients with Tumor Regression Grade (TRG) 3 (>50% residual viable tumor cells in the primary tumor bed) on postoperative pathological specimens, evaluated per AJCC 8th edition criteria.
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Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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Objective Response Rate (ORR)
時間枠:Assessed on pre-surgical imaging, within 1 week before surgery (approximately 3 months after initiation of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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Objective response rate (ORR) is defined as the proportion of patients achieving complete response (CR) or partial response (PR) on pre-surgical imaging (CT/MRI), evaluated per RECIST 1.1 criteria.
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Assessed on pre-surgical imaging, within 1 week before surgery (approximately 3 months after initiation of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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3-Year Progression-Free Survival (PFS)
時間枠:Assessed at 3 years after surgical resection, with annual follow-up
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Progression-free survival (PFS) is defined as the time from the date of surgical resection to the date of disease recurrence (local recurrence, regional lymph node recurrence, or distant metastasis) or death from any cause, whichever occurs first.
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Assessed at 3 years after surgical resection, with annual follow-up
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3-Year Overall Survival (OS)
時間枠:Assessed at 3 years after surgical resection, with annual follow-up
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Overall survival (OS) is defined as the time from the date of surgical resection to death from any cause.
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Assessed at 3 years after surgical resection, with annual follow-up
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Incidence of Immune-Related Adverse Events (irAEs)
時間枠:From initiation of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy to 30 days after completion of the last treatment cycle
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The incidence of immune-related adverse events (irAEs) during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy, graded according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 5.0.
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From initiation of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy to 30 days after completion of the last treatment cycle
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その他の成果指標
結果測定 |
メジャーの説明 |
時間枠 |
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Correlation Between Beta-Blocker Dose and Immunotherapy Efficacy
時間枠:Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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Exploratory analysis of the association between the type and daily dose of beta-blockers used during neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy and pathological response (MPR/pCR) in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer complicated by hypertension.
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Assessed on postoperative pathological specimens, approximately 1 week after surgical resection (within 4 months after completion of neoadjuvant immunochemotherapy)
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協力者と研究者
研究記録日
主要日程の研究
研究開始 (実際)
一次修了 (推定)
研究の完了 (推定)
試験登録日
最初に提出
QC基準を満たした最初の提出物
最初の投稿 (実際)
学習記録の更新
投稿された最後の更新 (実際)
QC基準を満たした最後の更新が送信されました
最終確認日
詳しくは
本研究に関する用語
キーワード
その他の研究ID番号
- NFEC-2026-285
個々の参加者データ (IPD) の計画
個々の参加者データ (IPD) を共有する予定はありますか?
IPD プランの説明
医薬品およびデバイス情報、研究文書
米国FDA規制医薬品の研究
米国FDA規制機器製品の研究
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胃がん(GC)の臨床試験
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The First Affiliated Hospital with Nanjing Medical...まだ募集していません
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