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Clinical Trial Summary

Vulvar cancer affects the external genitalia of women. This type of cancer is uncommon, arising mostly in older women and has been neglected in research and clinical trials. Over the recent years, investigators have learned that the most common type of vulvar cancer; vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) develops from pre-cancerous lesions via different pathways. One pathway is associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, and another is related to chronic inflammatory skin conditions (and not HPV). The VSCCs arising from these two principal pathways; HPV- associated (HPV A) and HPV-independent (HPV I), behave differently with different risks of recurrence, and different response to treatments. HPV-I VSCC are further defined by mutations in TP53 (Tumor Protein 53), which identify a group of patients with aggressive disease. Currently treatment is the same for all women with vulvar cancer, and consequently many women may be overtreated, and many women are not treated enough. Given evolving knowledge of this disease, this 'one size fits all' approach may no longer be appropriate. The investigators aim in this study is to see if personalizing surgical therapy for patients with vulvar cancer based on HPV and TP53 status will improve outcomes.


Clinical Trial Description

Purpose: The aim of this prospective study is to determine if implementation of HPV(p16) and p53 stratified management algorithms will improve outcomes for women with VSCC. Hypothesis: Primary: Molecular stratification of VSCC, using margin status for both HPV and p53 pathology to direct surgical management, will improve clinical outcomes. Patient Reported Outcomes (PRO) Hypothesis: In women with HPV-associated (HPV-A) VSCC who undergo less radical surgery, treatment-related side effects will be reduced, health-related quality of life will be improved, and fear of cancer recurrence will not be increased, when compared to patients who undergoing standard surgery. PROs that are expected to be improved in this subgroup are: satisfaction with body image, frequency and enjoyment of sexual activity, urinary symptoms, and genital pain. In women with HPV-independent (HPV-I) VSCC, the expected PRO/HRQL (Health-related quality of life) trajectory is expected to remain unchanged in the intervention group compared to the observation group, and fear of recurrence will be decreased. Justification: Most VSCC guidelines today recommend tumour-free pathological margins of 8mm or more to adequately treat the primary tumour. These guidelines are based on retrospective data which did not stratify patients based on HPV or TP53 mutation status. HPV-I VSCC: there is now data suggesting investigators are undertreating these patients and that surgical margins defined by proximity of invasive disease, presence of preinvasive disease and p53 IHC (Immunohistochemistry) status will guide the need for re-excision and optimize local disease control. Goal in HPV-I VSCC = demonstrating re-excision to achieve clear margins will improve outcomes. HPV-A VSCC: there is data supporting that investigators are likely overtreating these patients, and the absence of invasive disease at the resection margin will be sufficient without loss of local control and will improve patient reported outcomes. Goal in HPV-A VSCC= demonstrating de-escalation of surgery is safe(and will improve QoL). Objectives: Primary Objective: To determine if implementation of HPV and p53 stratified algorithms to guide surgical management will improve outcomes in patients with VSCC; based on 3-year local recurrence rates in both HPV-I and HPV-A disease Secondary Objectives: 1. Determine the health economic impact (EQ-5D) of implementation of HPV and p53 stratified treatment algorithms 2. Determine the patient reported outcomes (EORTC QLQ (Quality of Life Questionnaire) -C30 and EORTC QLQ-VU34), patient decisional conflict, patient satisfaction /acceptance with HPV and p53 stratified care in VSCC 3. Determine the disease specific survival (DSS) and overall survival (OS) for HPV-I and HPV-A VSCC managed per algorithms 4. Determine the feasibility of implementation of routine p16 and p53 IHC reporting in VSCC pathology (proportion of patients who had p53 and p16 IHC successfully performed in an acceptable turnaround time ie >85% of patients within 21 days of surgery) RESEARCH DESIGN: The HPV-I arm of the study will be conducted as a phase II, randomised control trial and the HPV-A arm of the study will be a prospective trial. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: The Kaplan-Meier method will be used to estimate 3-year rates of recurrence-free survival, vulvar cancer-specific survival, and overall survival and associated 95% confidence interval with the events defined as any recurrence or death for recurrence-free survival, death due to vulvar cancer for vulvar cancer-specific survival, and death due to any cause for overall survival. Women without the event observed at the time of analysis will be censored at the last follow-up. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05576831
Study type Interventional
Source British Columbia Cancer Agency
Contact Amy Jamieson, MD
Phone 604-875-4268
Email Amy.Jamieson@vch.ca
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2024
Completion date December 2025

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