Oral Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Elective Versus Therapeutic Neck Dissection in the Treatment of Early Node Negative Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oral Cavity
Verified date | June 2017 |
Source | Tata Memorial Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Cervical nodal metastasis is the single most important prognostic factor in head and neck
cancers. Appropriate management of the neck is therefore of paramount importance in the
treatment of these cancers. While it is obvious that the positive neck must be treated,
controversy has always surrounded the clinically node negative neck with respect to the
ideal treatment policy.The situation is difficult with regards to early cancers of the oral
cavity (T1/T2). These cancers are usually treated with surgery where excision is through the
per-oral route. Elective neck dissection in such a situation is an additional surgical
procedure with its associated costs, prolonged hospitalization and may be unnecessary in as
high as 80% of patients who finally turn out to be pathologically node negative. Should the
neck be electively treated or there be a wait and watch policy? Current practice is that the
neck is always addressed whenever there is an increased propensity to cervical metastasis or
when patient follow-up is unreliable.
There is clearly a need therefore for a large randomized trial that will resolve the issue
either way once and for all.
Primary Objective:
To demonstrate whether elective neck dissection (END) is equal or superior to the wait and
watch policy i.e.
therapeutic neck dissection (TND) in the management of the clinically No neck in early T1
/T2 cancers of the oral cavity.
Secondary Objective:
1. Does Ultrasound examination have any role in the routine initial workup of a node
negative patient?
2. How are patients ideally followed up -does sonography have a role or is clinical
examination sufficient.
3. Is assessment of tumor thickness by the surgeon at the time of initial surgery accurate
-Is there a correlation
4. Identify histological prognostic factors in the primary that may help identify a
sub-set of patients at an increased risk for cervical metastasis.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 710 |
Est. completion date | June 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 75 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Histologically proven T1 or T2 N0 M0 (clinical) squamous cell carcinoma of the buccal mucosa, lower alveolus, oral tongue and floor of mouth. 2. Surgery is the preferred treatment and the primary tumor can be excised with clear margins via the per-oral route. 3. No history of a prior malignancy in the head and neck region. 4. No prior malignancy outside the head and neck region in the preceding 5 years. 5. Patient will be reliable for follow-up 6. Age> 18 years and < 75 years. 7. No significant co-morbid conditions - ASA grade II and I. 8. Understands the protocol and is able to give informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Prior radiotherapy or surgery for malignancy in the head and neck region. 2. Non squamous cell carcinomas of the oral cavity. 3. Upper alveolus and palatal lesions where there is a possibility of retropharyngeal node involvement. 4. Per-oral excision of tumor will compromise margins in the opinion of the treating surgeon. 5. Significant co-existing pre-malignant conditions like erytho-leucoplakia and oral sub mucous fibrosis that in the opinion of the clinician would interfere in the planned treatment management of the patient. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
India | Tata Memorial Hospital | Mumbai | Maharashtra |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Tata Memorial Hospital |
India,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Overall Survival | survival would be calculated as time period between date of randomization and date of death from any cause or last follow up | 5 years | |
Secondary | Disease free survival | the interval between the date of randomization and the date of the first documented evidence of relapse at any site (local, regional, metastatic, or second primary) or death from any cause, whichever came first | 5 years | |
Secondary | Role of ultrasound examination in routine initial workup of a node negative patient. | to see that the addition of USG to routine initial work up helps in detection of cervical metastasis better | 5 years | |
Secondary | Role of ultrasonogrphy vs clinical examination in ideal follow up of patient. | to see if the addition of USG to routione clinical examination helps in early detection of the cervical metastasis and hence improves survival | 5 years | |
Secondary | Correlation between the tumour thickness assessment by surgeon on table , on frozen section and final histopathology. | to assess the concordance between the assessment on table by surgeon, pathologist at frozen section and histopathology taking histopathology as gold standard | Within 2 weeks after surgery | |
Secondary | Identify histological prognostic factors in primary that may help identify a sub-set of patients at an increased risk of cervical metastasis. | statistical analysis to identify the factors predicting cervical metastasis | upto 5 years |
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