©2022 Stanford Medicine
Clinical and Pathologic Studies of Patients Undergoing Treatment With EGFR Inhibitors
Not Recruiting
Trial ID: NCT01137162
Purpose
Cetuximab, erlotinib, and panitumumab are all recently FDA approved epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR) inhibitors that treat a wide variety of tumor types, such as colon, lung, and
head and neck. Blockade of the EGFR results in inhibition of multiple downstream pathways,
leading to slowed tumor growth. In addition, these inhibitors may enhance anti-tumor immune
responses through uncharacterized mechanisms. While producing significant responses in many
settings, EGFR inhibitors also result in significant skin toxicity (rash) in a high
percentage of patients. Multiple studies have correlated the presence and severity of rash
with clinical response. Unfortunately, severe rash can often lead to dose delays, reductions,
or even discontinuation of EGFR inhibitors, thus limiting their efficacy. The mechanism of
both the rash and its correlation with tumor response is poorly understood. Skin biopsies
display a robust leukocyte infiltrate, but a systematic analysis of the type of infiltrating
leukocytes, activation state, or homing receptor expression has not been performed.
Chemokines and chemokine receptors control leukocyte trafficking to the skin and other tissue
sites, and defined receptor profiles for skin-, gut-, and lung-homing leukocytes are well
established. In this study, the investigators propose to evaluate the homing phenotype of
leukocytes from peripheral blood and skin biopsies of patients receiving EGFR inhibitors. The
investigators will use RNA microarrays to evaluate the expression of chemokines and other key
genes regulated in skin during treatment. The investigators will utilize in vitro methods to
investigate effects of EGFR inhibitors on imprinting of T cell tissue-specific homing
receptors. The investigators will examine correlations among the pathologic data, clinical
findings, and tumor response. If validated, peripheral blood evaluation could potentially be
used as a predictive indicator for patients receiving EGFR inhibitors. This study may also
identify novel targets for limiting skin toxicity while receiving EGFR inhibitors, thus
allowing maximal dosing and clinical response from these agents.
Official Title
Clinical and Pathologic Studies of Patients Undergoing Treatment With EGFR Inhibitors
Stanford Investigator(s)
George A. Fisher Jr.
Colleen Haas Chair in the School of Medicine
Heather Wakelee
Professor of Medicine (Oncology)
Not Recruiting
Contact Information
Stanford University
School of Medicine
300 Pasteur Drive
Stanford,
CA
94305
ccto-office@stanford.edu
650-498-7061