Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT01863862

Organ Preservation in Elderly Patients With Rectal Cancer

Organ Preservation in Elderly Patients With Rectal Cancer: a Prospective Observational Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
Maria Sklodowska-Curie National Research Institute of Oncology · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In elderly patients postoperative mortality measured 3-6 months after total mesorectal excision is high. Thus, less toxic treatments may lead to a survival benefit for elderly patients even if a risk of local recurrence is slightly higher compared to the open surgery. The investigators addressed the question whether watch and wait policy is safe in clinical complete responders after (chemo)radiation for elderly patients with small or moderately advanced tumours.

Detailed description

There are two steps of selection. In the first step, the elderly patients with small or moderately advanced tumours who should routinely receive neoadjuvant chemoradiation (or radiation alone in those unfit for chemotherapy) prior to full-thickness local excision using transanal endoscopic microsurgery or prior to total mesorectal excision will be included. In the next step, only patients with clinical complete response obtained 8-10 weeks from completion of (chemo)radiation are selected. Those patients constitute study group and will be observed without further treatment. The remaining patients with residual cancer will proceed to routine management, namely transanal endoscopic microsurgery or total mesorectal excision. Patients undergoing transanal endoscopic microsurgery and having poor response to (chemo)radiation (ypT2-3 disease or positive margin) will proceed to the conversion to total mesorectal excision. Neoadjuvant chemoradiation: 50 Gy total dose over 5 weeks with 2 Gy per fraction delivered with simultaneous chemotherapy consisting of three cycles of 5-Fu 200 mg/m2 i.v. bolus and leucovorin 100 mg/m2 i.v. short infusion over 2 days given during 1-2, 15-16, and 29-30 days of radiotherapy. Patients unfit for chemotherapy will receive 25 Gy total dose over 5 days with 5 Gy per fraction. The study hypothesis is that in clinical complete responders after (chemo)radiation treated without initial surgery, the local recurrence rate will be less than 25% and results of the rescue surgery (local and distant recurrence rate) will be not worse (or only slightly worse) than that seen after up-front total mesorectal excision in patients with similar stage of the disease.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
RADIATIONRadiochemotherapy or radiotherapy50 Gy, 2 Gy per fraction with simultaneous 5-Fu and leucovorin or 5 x 5 Gy for patients unfit for chemotherapy. Patients with complete clinical response 8-10 weeks after radiotherapy will be closely observed and rescue surgery will be performed in a case of local recurrence. Patients with persistent tumour 8-10 weeks after radiotherapy will undergo transanal endoscopic microsurgery or total mesorectal excision. After transanal endosciopic microsurgery, patients with ypT0-1 disease and negative surgical margins will be closely observed and rescue total mesorectal excision will be performed in a case of local recurrence; those with ypT2-3 disease or with positive margin will undergo immediate conversion to total mesorectal excision.

Timeline

Start date
2012-08-01
Primary completion
2020-01-01
Completion
2020-01-01
First posted
2013-05-29
Last updated
2019-03-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Poland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01863862. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.