Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT06476639

A Phase III Randomised Clinical Trial of Ultrasound Groin Monitoring Versus Groin Lymph Node Dissection to De-Escalate the Extent of Surgery in Vulvar Cancer

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
640 (estimated)
Sponsor
Queensland Centre for Gynaecological Cancer · Other Government
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is a phase III, open label, multicentre, three-group, randomised clinical trial. The primary aim of this study is to determine whether intensive groin ultrasound monitoring (1) is effective and safe to replace invasive groin lymph node dissection (LND) to manage vulvar cancer, (2) decreases the morbidity associated with vulvar cancer surgery, and (3) is cost effective.

Detailed description

Treatment of vulvar cancer causes significant morbidity. Despite being a rare cancer, at least 2500 survivors of vulvar cancer live in Australia. Most survivors live with the detrimental, life-long impacts resulting from their cancer treatment because there are currently no alternatives to mitigate these impacts. The personal and societal burden this entails is significant. To control such cancer-associated burden is a national priority. Clinical palpation of the groin region and computed tomography (CT) scans do not reliably detect groin node involvement. Hence, current clinical guidelines recommend all women diagnosed at apparent Stage I or II have a surgical groin LND. This can be performed as a full IFL (full LND) to remove all groin nodes, or as a sentinel node biopsy (SNB) to remove selected (one or two) nodes. SNB is less invasive, however, is appropriate only for vulvar cancers \<4cm in diameter and unifocal tumours (\~50% of all Stage I and II vulvar cancers). SNB is also associated with a false negative rate (10%) that increases the risk of undetected nodes. In 25% of cases (\~80 Australian women per year), groin LND will reveal positive nodes (i.e., metastases), which triggers a referral for radiation treatment. If positive groin nodes are missed, and over time become enlarged, clinically palpable and attached to the overlying skin, \>90% of women will die within 12 months, despite subsequent treatment. Conversely, if groin node involvement is detected early (e.g., by ultrasound) while still small, survival outcomes are excellent. Ultrasound technology is potentially as accurate as LND due to recent advances in resolution and technologies such as 2D/3D volumetric assessments and tissue flow. Furthermore, ultrasound is superior to medical resonance imaging (MRI), and to standard CT and positron emission tomography (PET) scans in capturing groin node involvement because it has a higher resolution, avoids harmful radiation and the technology is readily accessible outside of high-volume metropolitan areas. The investigators propose to reduce surgical morbidity by replacing upfront groin LND for vulvar cancer patients with serial high-resolution ultrasound to detect groin metastases. Groin LND will only be necessary for the few women with ultrasound-detected metastases when they are still small. The ANVU trial will determine the value of serial groin ultrasound examinations in stage 1b and 2 vulvar cancer patients and whether it is feasible and safe to de-escalate the extent of vulvar cancer surgery to achieve improved outcomes for affected patients. Women with this rare cancer bear an unacceptably high (and potentially avoidable) treatment-related burden. This clinical trial is the first step to address this problem in a novel yet pragmatic way. The potential overall outcome of ANVU could be a novel, less invasive alternative to vulvar cancer LND hypothesised to be associated with significantly less morbidity, without compromising survival.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTHigh-resolution bilateral groin ultrasound monitoringParticipants in the Interventional Group will undergo surgical excision of the primary tumour, either via radical local excision or radical vulvectomy. Post-vulvar surgery, participants will receive a groin node ultrasound every 2 months for 12 months, and at month 15 and month 18, and a clinical examination at 8 weeks, 4 months, 8 months, 12 months, 15 months, and 18 months. Senior imaging specialists review bilateral ultrasound scans for positive lymph nodes or suspicious findings, promptly sending reports to the primary care physician and trial manager within 5 business days. If positive nodes are detected, participants will consult their primary care physician for options. Depending on clinical judgment, they may be referred for LND or continue with serial ultrasounds and clinical exams based on preference and clinician guidance.

Timeline

Start date
2026-06-01
Primary completion
2035-12-31
Completion
2035-12-31
First posted
2024-06-26
Last updated
2026-03-24

Locations

9 sites across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06476639. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.