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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01273051
Other study ID # CMO 2010_121
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received November 22, 2010
Last updated April 13, 2017
Start date November 2010
Est. completion date August 2015

Study information

Verified date April 2017
Source Radboud University
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In the Netherlands approximately 2300 new patients are diagnosed with rectal cancer each year. Standard treatment for patients with a T2 or T3 rectal cancer consists of preoperative short course of radiotherapy followed by surgery. In advanced cases long course of radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy is used instead of a short cause. In some of these advanced cases a complete remission is observed after a long course of radio-/chemotherapy. Patients who respond well to neo-adjuvant treatment carry a better prognosis.

Objective of this research is to evaluate whether neo-adjuvant chemo-/radiotherapy in small non-advanced rectal cancers can be used to obtain a complete or near complete remission. In these patients could a complete resection of the rectum as an organ be avoided by treating them with a local excision with the TEM-technique (Transanal Endoscopic Microsurgery) of the scar. The advantage for these patients is, that they do not need major abdominal surgery and in a substantial number of these patients the rectum can be preserved with a better function of continence.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 55
Est. completion date August 2015
Est. primary completion date August 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients (aged >18 years) with histological proven adenocarcinoma of the distal part of the rectum (below 10 cm) without signs of distant metastases.

- T1-3 tumour without lymph nodes > 5 mm at CT, MRI and endoanal ultrasound.

- ANC > 1.5 x 109/l.

- Thrombocytes > 100 x 109/l.

- Creatinin clearance >50ml/min (according to the Cockcroft-Gault formula)

- Total serum bilirubin < 24 mol/l or below <1.5 times the upper limit of the normal.

- ASAT,ALAT: up to 5 times the upper limit.

- Colonoscopy, colonography or virtual colonoscopy should exclude synchronous colorectal lesions in other parts of the colon.

- ECOG performance score 0-2.

- Fertile women should have adequate birth control during treatment.

- Mental/physical/geographical ability to undergo treatment and follow-up.

- Written informed consent (Dutch language).

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients with Grade 1-2 T1 tumors (can be treated with TEM surgery without chemoradiation therapy)

- Patients with circular rectal tumor or tumors who are by other means unacceptable for TEM surgery (e.g. intra anal tumors).

- Patients with faecal incontinence prior to the diagnosis of rectal cancer (complaints of soiling due to the tumor will not be an exclusion criterium).

- Severe uncontrollable medical or neurological disease.

- Patients with secondary prognosis determining malignancies.

- Patients who have been treated with radiotherapy on the pelvis.

- Use of Vitamin K antagonists.

- Fenytoine and Allopurinol use.

- Known DPD deficiency

- Uncontrolled active infection, compromised immune status, psychosis, or CNS disease.

- Pregnant or lactating women.

- Clinically significant (i.e. active) cardiovascular disease for example cerebrovascular accidents (= 6 months prior to randomisation), myocardial infarction (= 6 months prior to randomisation), unstable angina, New York Heart Association (NYHA) grade II or greater congestive heart failure, serious cardiac arrhythmia requiring medication.

- Evidence of other disease, metabolic dysfunction, physical examination finding, or clinical laboratory finding giving reasonable suspicion of a disease or condition that contraindicates use of Capecitabine or patients at high risk for treatment complications. History or evidence upon physical examination of CNS disease unless adequately treated (e.g., seizure not controlled with standard medical therapy).

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Capecitabine
Capecitabine will be administered at a dose of 825 mg/m2 bid during radiotherapy treatment
Radiation:
radiotherapy
radiation 25x2 Gy
Procedure:
TME resection
All patients undergo a MRI of the pelvis and a rectoscopy and endorectal ultrasound 6 weeks after chemo radiation. Patients who do not respond or clinically have a T3 tumour either on visual measurements or post therapy MRI or endoanal ultrasound will be operated on with a TME resection 8 - 10 weeks after the last chemo radiation treatment.
TEM surgery
All patients undergo a MRI of the pelvis and a rectoscopy and endorectal ultrasound 6 weeks after chemo radiation.Patients with a significant downsizing of the tumour (T0-T2) will be operated on by TEM surgery 8 -10 weeks after the last chemo radiation treatment. After TEM surgery, pathological assessment will dictate further treatment. Conservative treatment with careful follow-up will be performed in patients with a complete resection of a ypT0-1 rectal tumour. Patients with lymphangio invasion, an incomplete resected ypT1 (<2 mm margin), an ypT2 or ypT3 tumour after TEM will subsequently undergo TME surgery to remove the rectum within 4 weeks.

Locations

Country Name City State
Netherlands Academisch Medisch Centrum Amsterdam
Netherlands NKI AVL Amsterdam
Netherlands Slotervaart Ziekenhuis Amsterdam
Netherlands Amphia Ziekenhuis Breda
Netherlands IJsselland Ziekenhuis Capelle aan de IJssel
Netherlands Catharina Ziekenhuis Eindhoven
Netherlands LUMC Leiden
Netherlands MAASTRO Clinic Maastricht
Netherlands University Medical Centre Nijmegen Nijmegen Gelderland
Netherlands Laurentius Ziekenhuis Roermond
Netherlands Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam
Netherlands Instituut Verbeeten Tilburg
Netherlands Diakonessenhuis Utrecht

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Radboud University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Netherlands, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Response the response of the rectal carcinoma to chemo-/radiotherapy defined as complete response (no visible disease); partial response (more than 50% reduction of the tumour mass); no response (meaning an increase of the tumour mass less than 25% or a decrease of the tumour mass less than 50%); or progressive disease when the tumour mass increase more than 25% of the original tumour mass. Baseline and 6 weeks after chemoradiation therapy
Secondary Quality of life Quality of life form EORTC-QLQC30 and 38. Determine the faecal continence and QOL after treatment with TEM surgery will be compared with TME treated patients. baseline, 6-12-24 and 35 months after surgery
Secondary Local Recurrence Careful follow-up will determine the local recurrence rate of patients treated with TEM and TME surgery. This will be standard colorectal cancer follow-up with additional endo-anal endography and MRI for patients treated with TEM surgery during the first two years. 36 months, 60 months after surgery last enrolled patient
Secondary Toxicity Regional and systemic Toxicity/Side effects will be recorded according to the CTC-Toxicity Grading system, CTC-NCIC Toxicity Criteria v. 3.0. (See appendix to the protocol).
Surgical and postoperative complications will be collected and assessed during interim analysis.
4 weeks after surgery last enrolled patient
Secondary Number of positive lymph nodes in patient who have been treated with classical surgery The number of patients with positive lymph nodes after chemo radiation is expected to be less than 20%, this will carefully be monitored. 4 weeks after surgery last enrolled patient
Secondary The number of sphincter saving procedures after organ sparing surgery by classical TEM or after TME surgery: 4 weeks after surgery last enrolled patient