Gastroesophageal Junction Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
PET/MR-imaging and Circulating Tumour Cells to Evaluate the Response of Chemotherapy in Patients With Gastroesophageal Junction Cancer
Verified date | October 2016 |
Source | Rikshospitalet University Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Denmark: Ethics Committee |
Study type | Observational |
The incidence of malignity in the gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) is rising in Denmark, 400
new cases annually 1. 60% of the patients with GEJ cancer have disseminated disease
(M1-stage) at time of diagnosis and are consequently unable to undergo curative intended
surgery. The prognosis is poor, with 5-year survival rates of approximately 2 % for these
60% and the treatment only consists of palliative therapy 1. For the remaining approximately
40 % who are assessed as candidates for curative intended surgery, the 5-year survival rate
is 33 % 1. This emphasizes the need for further research and knowledge concerning tumour
biology and spontaneous course of the disease.
In Denmark, all cancer patients are enrolled in a specific cancer program. The primary
diagnostic work-up for GEJ cancers includes gastroscopy with biopsy, blood samples,
ultrasonography scan, Positronemissionstomography (PET) and Computed tomography (CT) alone
or PET/CT in combination 2. From these parameters physicians determine resectability and
TNM-stage (tumour staging), which is substantial for the prognosis and future treatment. The
primary goal is to achieve a macroscopically resection of tumour and lymphnodes in relation
to the stomach and oesophagus (Esophagectomi a.m. Ivor Lewis and D1+ lymphadenectomy in the
abdomen and thorax). In addition to surgery, patients receive perioperative chemotherapy,
which consist of three series of chemotherapy preoperative and three series postoperative
approximately 21-28 days after surgery.
Approximately 12.6 % of patients receiving perioperative chemotherapy prior to surgery will
have disease progression due to chemotherapy resistance during the therapy 3. This
unintentionally leads to shifting these patients from the resectable group to non-resectable
group (palliative treatment). Thus, the possibility for detecting response to perioperative
chemotherapy is of great interest. A paradigm shift towards an individualised tailored
therapy form has emerged in recent years, which potentially require a higher need for
diagnosis on molecular level. Today most molecular biological methods apply tissue samples
for in-vitro analyses, but new radiological tools provide opportunity for non-invasive
examinations; for example PET can with a radioactive sugar compound: Flour-18 deoxyglucose
(18F-FDG). This compound is injected through a catheter in a larger vein (media cubiti vein)
and absorbed in cells with increased metabolism - especially cancer cells. A PET scanner
registers the absorption; this radiology modality can provide valid information, which is
essential for non-invasive tumour staging and monitoring response under a specific therapy.
A new diagnostic modality is PET scan combinated with magnetic resonance (PET/MR)
simultaneously. So far, no studies have conducted an evaluation of simultaneous PET/MR scan
to assess the perioperative chemotherapy response in patients with GEJ cancer. However, some
studies suggest that commercially available PET/MR scanner might contribute in a diagnostic
elucidation 6. Simultaneous PET/MR scan might in theory minimize the misinterpretations of
potential response changes after chemotherapy, which can appear in the interval between
separate PET, CT and MR scans 4,5,7. Studies have found PET scan of GEJ cancer could be
helpful as a prognostic tool to differentiate between responders and non-responders during
chemotherapy 9. Standardized uptake value (SUV) is a unit that display the absorption of
18F-FDG and is used routinely to quantify tumour glucose metabolism in PET scan 8. A change
of more than 35 % in SUV measurements before and after the induction of chemotherapy is
considered as the definition of responders and non-responders in earlier studies 9.
The MR technique is based on magnetic fields and radio waves. Diffusion Weighted Imaging
(DWI) is a non-invasive MR-modality, which measures the changes in water diffusion (Brownian
movements) throughout tissue. These changes are measured in Apparent Diffusion Coefficient
(ADC), a parameter derived from DWI and reflects the change in diffusion 7. ADC and DWI can
be used to differentiate between benign and malignant tumours, due to a larger cell density
in malignant tumours. Consequently, malignant tissue has a decreased diffusion relative to
normal tissue. ADC has been used as a factor in some studies to predict the response to
chemotherapy 10. A single study has shown a rise in ADC-value two weeks after initiation of
chemotherapy in patients with GEJ cancer, and demonstrated that the percentage change in
ADC-value between the groups (responders and non-responders) is significantly different 11.
Simultaneous PET- and MR scan might be very useful to evaluate the response to chemotherapy
in patients with GEJ cancer compared with these parameters alone. The opportunity for a more
individualised tailored treatment in future might be possible with PET/MR.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 23 |
Est. completion date | June 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Patients with histologically verified adenocarcinoma of the Gastroesophageal junction and assessed as operable. Exclusion Criteria: - Under 18 of age - Not given informed consent - Other histological cancers besides adenocarcinoma - Metal in the body that would contraindicate MR-imaging - Allergies for contrast - Claustrophobia - Not a candidate for perioperative chemotherapy and surgery |
Time Perspective: Prospective
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Rigshospitalet | Copenhagen |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Rikshospitalet University Hospital |
Denmark,
Basu S, Alavi A. Unparalleled contribution of 18F-FDG PET to medicine over 3 decades. J Nucl Med. 2008 Oct;49(10):17N-21N, 37N. Review. — View Citation
Gambhir SS. Molecular imaging of cancer with positron emission tomography. Nat Rev Cancer. 2002 Sep;2(9):683-93. Review. — View Citation
Jadvar H, Colletti PM. Competitive advantage of PET/MRI. Eur J Radiol. 2014 Jan;83(1):84-94. doi: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2013.05.028. Epub 2013 Jun 18. Review. — View Citation
Larsen AC, Holländer C, Duval L, Schønnemann K, Achiam M, Pfeiffer P, Yilmaz MK, Thorlacius-Ussing O, Bæksgaard L, Ladekarl M. A nationwide retrospective study of perioperative chemotherapy for gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma: tolerability, outcome, and prognostic factors. Ann Surg Oncol. 2015 May;22(5):1540-7. doi: 10.1245/s10434-014-4127-2. Epub 2014 Oct 28. — View Citation
Padhani AR, Liu G, Koh DM, Chenevert TL, Thoeny HC, Takahara T, Dzik-Jurasz A, Ross BD, Van Cauteren M, Collins D, Hammoud DA, Rustin GJ, Taouli B, Choyke PL. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging as a cancer biomarker: consensus and recommendations. Neoplasia. 2009 Feb;11(2):102-25. — View Citation
Rakheja R, Chandarana H, DeMello L, Jackson K, Geppert C, Faul D, Glielmi C, Friedman KP. Correlation between standardized uptake value and apparent diffusion coefficient of neoplastic lesions evaluated with whole-body simultaneous hybrid PET/MRI. AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2013 Nov;201(5):1115-9. doi: 10.2214/AJR.13.11304. — View Citation
Thoeny HC, Ross BD. Predicting and monitoring cancer treatment response with diffusion-weighted MRI. J Magn Reson Imaging. 2010 Jul;32(1):2-16. doi: 10.1002/jmri.22167. Review. — View Citation
Weber MA, Bender K, von Gall CC, Stange A, Grünberg K, Ott K, Haberkorn U, Kauczor HU, Zechmann C. Assessment of diffusion-weighted MRI and 18F-fluoro-deoxyglucose PET/CT in monitoring early response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction. J Gastrointestin Liver Dis. 2013 Mar;22(1):45-52. — View Citation
Zhu W, Xing L, Yue J, Sun X, Sun X, Zhao H, Yu J. Prognostic significance of SUV on PET/CT in patients with localised oesophagogastric junction cancer receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy/chemoradiation:a systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Radiol. 2012 Sep;85(1017):e694-701. doi: 10.1259/bjr/29946900. Epub 2012 Feb 14. Review. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | To Study wether molecular PET/MR-imaging can measure a significant difference between responders and non-responders receiving perioperative chemotherapy | 8 Months | No | |
Secondary | To examine if DWI and ADC can identify lymph nodes suspected for malignancy and correlate these with findings from the resected tumour preparation | 8 Months | No | |
Secondary | To correlate a possible difference in responders and non-responders to survival, disease progression prior to surgery, inoperability, surgical complications and tolerance of both preoperative- and postoperative chemotherapy | 8 Months | No |
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