An Exploratory Study on Microbial Biomarkers Associated With the Efficacy of Neoadjuvant Therapy
NCT07263620 · Status: RECRUITING · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 90
Last updated 2025-12-04
Summary
Digestive system malignancies are among the most common types of cancers in China, primarily including esophageal cancer, gastric cancer, pancreatic cancer, liver cancer, and colorectal cancer. According to the 2024 National Cancer Registry data released by the National Cancer Center of China (covering a population of 523 million), digestive system tumors (including colorectal, liver, gastric, and esophageal cancers) account for 28.49% of all new cancer cases and 31.77% of total cancer-related deaths in the country. Among these, the incidence and mortality burdens of gastric, esophageal, and liver cancers are significantly higher than the global average. Most patients are diagnosed at an advanced stage, with a five-year survival rate below 30%. This highlights that digestive system malignancies represent a major public health challenge in China, necessitating in-depth studies on their pathogenesis and the development of novel prevention and treatment strategies.
At present, radical surgical resection remains the only potentially curative option for digestive system cancers. However, for patients with locally advanced or late-stage disease, surgery alone yields limited efficacy. In recent years, chemotherapy-based neoadjuvant therapy has been increasingly applied in clinical practice to improve R0 resection rates and overall survival \[4-6\]. Nevertheless, current studies show that the response rate to neoadjuvant therapy remains modest, and there is a lack of precise strategies for identifying therapy-sensitive patient subgroups, resulting in a limited proportion of patients who truly benefit.
The gut microbiota, as an essential component of the human microecosystem, plays a critical role in tumor initiation, progression, metastasis, and therapeutic response. Given the anatomic location of digestive system cancers, the gut microbiota-being a major source of intratumoral microorganisms-interacts closely with the tumor microenvironment. Studies have revealed marked differences in the gut microbial composition between pancreatic cancer patients and healthy individuals, characterized by a significant reduction in short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria and enrichment of inflammation-associated species. Furthermore, gut-derived microbes within pancreatic tumors are closely associated with immune microenvironment remodeling and gemcitabine resistance.
Similarly, gastric cancer patients exhibit distinct microbial profiles in both gastric fluid and tumor tissue compared with healthy controls-for instance, Helicobacter pylori enrichment-which may influence both tumorigenesis and neoadjuvant treatment efficacy. In colorectal cancer, Fusobacterium nucleatum and Peptostreptococcus anaerobius are significantly enriched in tumors resistant to immunotherapy, suggesting a key role of gut microbiota in treatment resistance. In hepatocellular carcinoma, intratumoral microbial subtypes are closely linked to tumor progression, and Klebsiella pneumoniae has been shown to promote hepatocarcinogenesis.
However, many key microbial species and their mechanistic roles in shaping the tumor microenvironment of digestive system cancers remain poorly understood, limiting the further clinical application of strategies such as neoadjuvant therapy in these patients. Therefore, a deeper investigation into the microbial characteristics of digestive system tumors and their correlation with neoadjuvant therapeutic response is of great clinical significance, particularly for identifying microbiome-based biomarkers that predict therapeutic efficacy and enable the selection of optimal candidate populations.
In summary, we have designed a prospective exploratory study to investigate the microbial characteristics and functional targets of digestive system cancers, aiming to develop and preliminarily validate a predictive model for identifying patient subgroups likely to benefit from neoadjuvant therapy. This study seeks to discover microbiome-associated biomarkers predictive of treatment efficacy and to expand the clinical application scope of neoadjuvant therapy in digestive system malignancies.
Conditions
- Digestive System Malignancies
Interventions
- OTHER
-
This study is observational and involves no interventions.
This study is observational and involves no interventions.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital
lead OTHER
Eligibility
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2025-10-01
- Primary Completion
- 2026-01-30
- Completion
- 2026-03-01
Countries
- China
Study Locations
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