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RecruitingNCT06513065

Study to Evaluate the Non-inferiority of Low-dose HIPEC Versus High-dose HIPEC in the Treatment of PMP (HIPEC-PMP)

A Single Blinded Randomised Controlled Study to Evaluate the Non-inferiority of HIPEC With Mitomycin C 10 mg/m2 for 60 Minutes Versus HIPEC With Mitomycin C 35mg/m2 for 90 Minutes in the Treatment of Pseudomyxoma Peritonei From Perforated Epithelial Mucinous Tumours of the Appendix

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
176 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Southampton · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The Investigators are researching how to improve the treatment currently available for patients diagnosed with Pseudomyxoma Peritonei (PMP). This is a rare cancer that usually starts in the appendix and spreads around the abdomen. PMP is usually treated using a type of surgery called Cytoreductive Surgery (CRS). During the surgery heated chemotherapy will also be used to treat any cancer cells that cannot be seen and may be left behind. This is called Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC). This treatment is commonly used in the UK and in Europe, however, the chemotherapy can be given at two different doses: a lower dose over 60 minutes or a higher-dose over 90 minutes. The Investigators want to understand if there is a difference between these two doses. The higher dose has been associated with a slightly increased rate of complications but may be better at killing cancer cells and preventing recurrence of cancer. In Basingstoke the lower dose over 60 minutes is used and survival results are similar to centres who use the higher dose. Previous studies have shown that both doses are effective at treating PMP, but no research has shown which is better for patients. The Investigators hope to show that the lower-dose over 60-minutes is as good as the higher-dose over 90-minutes.

Detailed description

HIPEC-PMP is a randomised, non-inferiority phase III trial with two parallel groups, designed to assess two doses of mitomycin C (MMC) for the treatment of pseudomyxoma peritonei. The trial is to be carried out in a single specialist centre. The low and high doses within the trial are used routinely across the world, but to date they have not been compared directly. As the lead site use low dose MMC, the trial has been designed to assess whether this has comparable performance to high dose with respect to clinical outcomes (primarily disease-free survival; DFS), hence the non-inferiority design. The trial uses a Bayesian design to incorporate existing information on the two treatments (given they are used routinely, and various studies have reported DFS rates in cohort studies). The design allows for discounting the prior information through data-driven weighting of different prior distributions, if the observed data is observed to be markedly different to prior data. Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) represent the standard of care for Pseudomyxoma Peritonei (PMP) of appendiceal origin. Although Mitomycin C is used as standard of care HIPEC treatment, the optimal dose of Mitomycin C (MMC) and duration of HIPEC following cytoreductive surgery remains to be defined. This study therefore aims to evaluate the non-inferiority of HIPEC with mitomycin C 10 mg/m2 for 60 minutes versus HIEPC with mitomycin C 35 mg/m2 for 90 minutes. There is a small risk of higher toxicity with 35 mg/m2 of Mitomycin C, however Kuijpers et al found that morbidity was tolerable and convincing survival. There is limited evidence on the quality of life in patients with PMP, therefore assessing quality of life will provide information that could be used to improve patient care and well-being. In addition, furthering understanding of the genetics of the disease could improve prognostication and targeted treatments for patient benefit could be explored and will therefore be investigated in this study. Translational blood samples including tissue (normal, primary and metastatic), serum, plasma, DNA, RNA and buffy coat will be collected for genetic analysis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGMitomycin cMitomycin is a tumour antibiotic isolated from the broth of Streptomyces species. It has alkylating properties, which results in DNA cross-linking. Once MMC enters the tumour cell, it needs microsomal modification by various enzymes to be transformed into active state; free radicals constituted of semiquinones of MMC are responsible for its cytotoxic effects. Mitomycin is licenced in the UK and recommended by NICE for intraperitoneal chemotherapy.

Timeline

Start date
2024-12-04
Primary completion
2028-09-01
Completion
2029-04-01
First posted
2024-07-22
Last updated
2026-02-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06513065. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.