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DOvEEgene/WISE Genomics: Diagnosing Ovarian and Endometrial Cancer Early Using Genomics
NCT02288676 · McGill University
In plain English
Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.
About this study
For women in high-income countries, ovarian/fallopian tube and endometrial cancers are within the top four cancers in terms of incidence, death and healthcare expenditure. The deaths associated with these cancers are largely caused by Stage III/IV disease, for which cure rates have not changed in three decades, despite escalating costs of treatment. Attempts at early detection have been ineffective in reducing mortality, because the high-grade subtypes, which account for the majority of deaths, metastasize while the primary cancer is still small, has not caused symptoms, and is undetectable by imaging or blood tumour markers.
In recent years, the recognition that somatic mutations are early steps in carcinogenesis has led to a shift from tests such as imaging and non-specific blood tumour markers to technology that detects cancer-associated mutations in cervical, uterine, or blood samples. Several DNA-tagging technologies have been shown to be capable of identifying small amount of cancer DNA among thousands of normal cells, the proverbial needle in a haystack.
This investigation aims to develop and validate a high-sensitivity capture using a panel of genes involved in ovarian and endometrial carcinogenesis, low-pass whole genome sequencing, coupled with a machine-learning derived classifier for discriminating cancer from benign gynecologic disease prevalent in peri/post-menopausal women.
Eligibility criteria
Case Inclusion:
* Subjects should have suspected or confirmed cancer of the upper genital tract.
* Participant will undergo surgery for tumour removal.
Control inclusion:
• Subjects should be scheduled to have a hysterectomy, bilateral salpingectomy, with or without bilateral oophorectomy, for presumed benign disease.
Study design
Enrollment target: 1200 participants
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2014-01
Estimated completion: 2026-10
Last updated: 2025-06-18
Primary outcomes
- • Detection of cancer-related mutations (3 years)
Sponsor
McGill University · other
With: McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
Contacts & investigators
ContactDr. Lucy Gilbert, MD,MSc,FRCOG · contact · lucy.gilbert@mcgill.ca · (514) 934-1934
ContactDr. Claudia Martins, PhD · contact · claudia.martins@mcgill.ca · (514) 934-1934
InvestigatorDr Ioannis Ragoussis, PhD · study_director, McGill Genome Center
All locations (1)
Royal Victoria Hospital (Glen Site)Recruiting
Montreal, Quebec, Canada