Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

A national study of a three year cohort consisting of all patients diagnosed with anal cancer in 2011- 2013 with data retrieval from three national registries: Cancer Registry, Patient registry and Cause of Death Registry all within the Swedish Board of Health and Welfare. All out- and inpatient visits with diagnoses, admission dates and discharge dates will be requested including. Patient documentation from the concerned hospitals will be collected and data on the details of the treatment collected retrospectively in a standardised fashion using a clinical record form. Comorbidity will be calculated using data from the Patient Registry using all main and co-diagnoses 2 years prior and then at least two years after treatment cessation. Detailed questionnaires will be sent out once at 2-3 years and a second time at about 6 years after index treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Squamous cell carcinoma of the anus or "anal cancer" is an uncommon disease in the Western world. In Sweden approximately 100 patients are diagnosed each year. Most patients are treated by chemotherapy and radiation, but a small subgroup of non-responders and patients with recurrent disease undergo abdominoperineal excision with a permanent colostomy. In most reports of results these patients have a worse prognosis and a higher risk of local recurrence than anal cancer as a group(1, 2), possibly a result of a selection bias. Recently the results in a large Nordic cohort were presented, indicating that a further factor connected with successful outcome was that the patient was included in a treatment protocol(3). A small number of patients with very small cancers are operated on primarily. This is especially true for anal margin tumours(4). However, for the most part patients will be primarily treated with radiotherapy, as their curative treatment. In Sweden the treatment has been centralised for many years. The radiotherapy is normally a long course therapy with many smaller doses resulting in a high dose of radiation. There are well known complications such as skin problems and to some extent chronic radiation effects on deeper structures, which can result in functional side effects. If the treatment includes an abdominoperineal excision, the effects of a colostomy on quality of life as well as functional aspects of this surgical procedure are largely unknown in this group of patients. In our research group we have earlier studied large cohorts of patients who have undergone abdominoperineal excision for rectal cancer, and also unselected groups of patients with rectal cancer, studying both functional aspects and quality of life using detailed questionnaires (5, 6). Further we have results on quality of life from a cohort of Swedish inhabitants, representing men and women aged 30 to 90 years. The majority of the questions in these questionnaires are similar making comparisons possible. In other studies within the SSORG network we have used the "Steineck concept" to investigate patient experiences of health, functional results and quality of life (7-11). We use specific questionnaires with detailed questions about experiences and symptoms asking about severity and duration as well as questions on socioeconomic functioning and life style factors (12, 13). Our experience is that patients are motivated to answer such questionnaires, with a compliance at 3 months >90% and at 12 months >85%. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02546973
Study type Observational
Source Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sweden
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase
Start date September 2015
Completion date May 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Enrolling by invitation NCT05060471 - PD-1 Blockade Combined With Chemotherapy Followed by Concurrent Immunoradiotherapy for Locally Advanced SCCA Patients Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT02135419 - Treatment in Preventing Anal Cancer in Patients With HIV and Anal High-Grade Lesions Phase 3
Completed NCT05518201 - Evaluate the Safety and Immunogenicity of a 9-valent HPV Vaccine in Chinese Healthy Male Aged 9-45 Year-old Phase 1
Withdrawn NCT02857608 - A Prospective, Open-Label, Multi-center Comparison of Lymphoseek Identified Lymph Nodes and Clinically Identified Lymph Nodes of Subjects With Known Cancer of the Anus Phase 2
Terminated NCT00903396 - Palonosetron Hydrochloride in Preventing Nausea and Vomiting Caused by Radiation Therapy in Patients With Primary Abdominal Cancer Phase 2
Completed NCT00550589 - Cidofovir in Treating HIV-Infected Patients With High-Grade Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions of the Skin Near the Anus Phase 2
Terminated NCT00896467 - Psychological and Emotional Impact in Patients Undergoing Treatment For Metastatic Cancer Either in a Clinical Trial or as Standard Off-Trial Therapy N/A
Completed NCT00324415 - Combined Modality Therapy for Patients With With HIV and Stage I, Stage II, or Stage III Anal Cancer Phase 2
Terminated NCT00568425 - QOL & Functional Outcomes After Combined Modality Tx for Anal CA: Comparison of Conventional vs IMRT
Terminated NCT00267787 - Molecular Genetic and Pathological Studies of Anal Tumors
Completed NCT00066430 - Infrared Coagulation in Preventing Anal Cancer in Patients With HIV Who Have Anal Neoplasia Phase 1
Completed NCT04083053 - High-Resolution Anoscopy Perceived Discomfort Study N/A
Completed NCT03506529 - Identification of Predictive Factors for Physiological Hypermetabolism of the Anal Canal in 18F-FDG PET / CT
Recruiting NCT05835947 - Anal Cancer Risk In Women
Not yet recruiting NCT03947775 - HPV-SAVE_Merck_Sub-Study for Preventing Recurrence of HSIL Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04857528 - Detecting HPV DNA in Anal and Cervical Cancers
Recruiting NCT04708470 - A Phase I/II Study of Combination Immunotherapy for Advanced Cancers Including HPV-Associated Malignancies, Small Bowel, and Colon Cancers Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04907643 - Virtual Reality for GI Cancer Pain to Improve Patient Reported Outcomes N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01937780 - Anal Cancer Radiotherapy Study
Completed NCT01651949 - Multivalent HPV (Human Papillomavirus) Vaccine Study in 16- to 26-Year Old Men and Women (V503-003) Phase 3