Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04916054

Time to Surgery and Survival Outcomes for Patients With Resected Colorectal Carcinoma: Multicenter Study (BIG RENAPE)

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
227 (actual)
Sponsor
Institut Cancerologie de l'Ouest · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is diagnosed in one million patients each year worldwide and is the 2nd leading cause of cancer death. Peritoneal metastasis (MP) is seen in 10% of CRC patients and is the metastatic site with the worst prognosis. Complete cytoreduction surgery (CCS) is the only treatment that allows for prolonged survivals. Five-year overall survival (OS) after CCS ranges from 30% to 60% compared with 0 to 5% with exclusive medical treatment. Chemotherapy (CT) with fluoropyrimidine and oxaliplatin and/or irinotecan 3 months pre-operatively and 3 months adjuvant is widely used. The benefits of perioperative CT have been demonstrated in another resectable metastatic site, the liver and has become by extension a therapeutic standard in France for CRC MPs. However, the impact of delay in the initiation of surgery and adjuvant or neoadjuvant CT is unknown for CRC MPs. Several deleterious oncologic effects are related to a long period without treatment between * Neoadjuvant chemotherapy and surgery: * Surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. Several meta-analyses have demonstrated, for at least 13 different cancers, a continuous association between delays in treatment (CT, radiotherapy, or surgery) and cancer mortality. For CRC, Hanna's meta-analysis showed that for every 4-week delay in adjuvant surgery or CT, the risk of cancer death increased by 6 and 13%, respectively. These long delays between CT and excisional surgery also decrease survival in patients with liver metastases from colorectal origins and MPs from ovarian origins but this has never been evaluated in patients with MPs from colorectal origins. Demonstrating an oncologic impact of therapeutic delays would have several strategic practical impacts such as: * Promoting pre- and post-operative rehabilitation programs to facilitate recovery and reduce time to retreatment. * To use more easily techniques (protective stoma, multi-stage surgery) limiting the risk of complications and therefore the delays in treatment. * Propose clinical research protocols aimed at reducing these delays with knowledge of plausible statistical hypotheses. A therapeutic strategy of shortening the time between each treatment therefore deserves to be evaluated in metastatic forms of colorectal cancer. The investigators would like to evaluate the hypothesis that shortened time between treatments could have a prognostic impact on recurrence-free survival.

Detailed description

This is a retrospective study including exhaustively all patients operated CC0-CC1 of peritoneal carcinosis between 2007 and 2019 meeting the inclusion criteria: * Patients from the Institut de cancérologie de l'Ouest and the CHU of Lyon for the study period 2007-2016 * Patients included in the BIG-RENAPE network between 2016 and 2019

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2021-06-04
Primary completion
2021-12-31
Completion
2022-03-10
First posted
2021-06-07
Last updated
2026-02-13

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04916054. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.