Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT00300729

Effect of Celecoxib on Survival in Patients With Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Receiving Chemotherapy

Cox-2-Inhibitor and Chemotherapy in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. A Prospective Randomized Double-Blind Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
319 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Linkoeping · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The primary purpose of the study is to investigate if daily treatment with celecoxib, an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-2, can prolong survival in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer who receive anticancer chemotherapy as their primary treatment. Secondary endpoints of the study are: health-related quality of life, toxicity, cardiovascular events, progression-free survival, and biological markers (VEGF, proteomics).

Detailed description

The study (CYCLUS trial, CY-cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor, Chemotherapy, LUng cancer, Survival) is a prospective randomized double-blind multicenter trial. Patients are randomized to receive celecoxib at a dose of 400 mg b.i.d. or placebo. Primary endpoint of the trial is survival. Secondary endpoints are: quality of life, progression-free survival, toxicity, cardiovascular events, and biological parameters (plasma VEGF and proteomics). The rationale behind the study consists of preclinical observations of antitumor effect of celecoxib in NSCLC. Inhibition of angiogenesis and proliferation as well as increased apoptosis has been demonstrated. In addition, pilot studies have shown that the combination of chemotherapy and celecoxib is feasible. No unexpected toxicity has been recorded in such trials. Furthermore, a randomized study of indomethacin, prednisolone or placebo in other types of advanced cancer, mainly gastrointestinal, showed a survival advantage for patients receiving antiinflammatory treatment. Chemotherapy is given according to the current standard of the participating institution. In practice, patients will usually receive either carboplatin + gemcitabine or carboplatin + vinorelbine. Treatment duration with chemotherapy is 4 cycles (cycle length 3 weeks) in the absence of tumour progression or prohibitive toxicity. Treatment with the study drug starts on the first day of cancer chemotherapy. Maximum treatment duration is one year. Treatment will be stopped earlier in case of objective tumor progression, serious toxicity that is considered to be related to the study drug or if the patient wants to stop treatment. The size of the study is based on the hypothesis that celecoxib could prolong median survival by 8 weeks as compared to 7.5 months in the placebo group. With standard statistical requirements (type I error 5%, type II error 20%), the calculated number of patients was 760. The study was supported by the Swedish Lung Cancer Study Group and organized as a multicenter trial, with participation of seven university hospitals and six smaller hospitals. The number of new cases of NSCLC stage IIIB-IV and performance status 0-2 in Sweden is around 1200/year. It was expected that 20% of the patients could be included in the study, which would make completion possible in three years. The study was opened for randomization on May 31, 2006. Recruitment of patients was lower than expected. The study was closed for further randomization on May 31, 2009, as originally planned. 319 patients were included. Since maximum duration of treatment with the study drug is one year, the code will be broken after May 31, 2010. Data analysis is planned to take place in summer and autumn, 2010.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCelecoxibCelecoxib 400 mg twice daily, orally, starting on the same day as palliative chemotherapy. Maximum duration of treatment is one year. Treatment should be terminated earlier in case of disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or if the patient wants to stop treatment.
DRUGPlaceboOne capsule twice daily, starting on the same day as palliative chemotherapy. Maximum duration of treatment is one year. Treatment should be terminated earlier in case of disease progression, unacceptable toxicity, or if the patient wants to stop treatment.

Timeline

Start date
2006-05-01
Primary completion
2010-05-01
Completion
2010-09-01
First posted
2006-03-09
Last updated
2009-06-30

Locations

13 sites across 1 country: Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00300729. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.