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A medication called temozolomide has been used for many years in the treatment of high-grade gliomas, which are tumours that originate in the brain. While this drug is the normal treatment for high-grade glioma, a number of patients develop a side-effect which results in low levels of some important blood cells, such as platelets or white blood cells. If this side-effect occurs, treatment with temozolomide may have to be stopped or paused, which may affect how well this treatment works. At present, it is unknown why some patients develop this side effect and others do not. It is known that patients with a higher concentration of temozolomide in their blood are at an increased risk of developing this toxicity. There may be some factors associated with the movement of the drug in the body or the removal of the drug from the body which may affect the concentration of temozolomide in blood. There are many factors which may be involved, including genes, other medicines that are taken, how well kidneys and liver are working or even the microbiome (which is the bacteria in the gut). This study is being done to find out what these factors could be. In the future, this may lead to medical care teams being able to predict which patients are at higher risk of side-effects, allowing them to implement measures to reduce the risk of this occurring.
Concurrent (with radiotherapy) and adjuvant temozolomide (TMZ) is the standard of care treatment for high grade glioma, however, severe haematological toxicity is a major dose limiting factor, impacting 16-45% of patients in different studies. The investigators hypothesize that mechanistic factors such as genetic polymorphisms, renal function or other patient factors such as sex, concomitant medications or the microbiome result in this interpatient variability in toxicity. This study aims to develop a pharmacokinetic model of temozolomide to test the effect of these potential covariates on TMZ concentration (Part A) in patients with brain tumours being treated with TMZ. Using this model, the investigators aim to assess patients who develop haematological toxicity from TMZ for mechanistic predictors of this toxicity (Part B). The investigators hypothesise that the development of severe TMZ-induced haematological toxicity is due to higher exposure to temozolomide in plasma, driven by mechanistic factors, such as pharmacogenomic variants, the microbiome or demographic factors.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Cork University Hospital
Cork, Ireland
Start Date
August 22, 2024
Primary Completion Date
July 1, 2027
Completion Date
December 1, 2027
Last Updated
March 4, 2026
55
ESTIMATED participants
Lead Sponsor
University College Cork
Collaborators
NCT05839379
NCT06860594
Data Source & Attribution
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