Colon Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Value of Laparoscopic Ultrasound in Patients Undergoing Laparoscopic Resection for Cancer of the Colon or Rectum: A Prospective Randomized Trial
The following project deals with a Danish multicenter trial that evaluates the value of
Laparoscopic Ultrasound examination (LUS) in laparoscopic surgery for colon and rectum
cancer (CRC).
The project "The value of laparoscopic ultrasound in patients undergoing laparoscopic
resection for colon and rectum cancer. - A prospective randomized trial" is part of a ph.d-
study at the University of Southern Denmark in collaboration with several surgical
departments at hospitals in Southern Denmark.
The primary purpose is to investigate whether the use of laparoscopic ultrasound examination
(LUS) will change the stage of the tumor, lymph node and metastasis (TNM stage) and the
surgical approach in patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery for colorectal cancer (CRC).
As a secondary objective; an evaluation of the use of LUS will change the treatment strategy
for the individual patient with CRC.
As an other objective we wants to investigate whether the use of contrast enhanced
ultrasound examination in connection with LUS procedure increases the number of detected
liver metastases.
Laparoscopic surgery for cancer in the colon or rectum seems to be equal standing to open
surgery with regards to the morbidity, mortality and the oncologic results (radicality and
re-lapse frequency and long-term survival). Laparoscopic surgery for colon and rectum cancer
is now a well-understood and well-established surgical method, but there are only few
randomized trials dealing with the long-term results. The latest inventory work calls for
better documentation of long-term results and calls for further randomized studies. Despite
this, the number of laparoscopic operations for colorectal cancer (CRC) in Denmark is
increasing, and laparoscopic surgery has partially become established as standard treatment
for CRC.
Liver metastases are frequent in patients with CRC and about 15-20% of patients already have
metastases at the diagnosis. Ultrasound examination during open surgery (IOUS) has shown to
be an important diagnostic tool with high sensitivity (98%) and positive predictive value
(86%) for detection liver metastases that are undiagnosed on preoperative computed
tomography scan (CT) or Positron emission tomography-computed tomography scan (PET-CT). IOUS
is considered as the gold standard for hepatic metastases within open surgery for CRC. In
laparoscopic surgery this option disappears, but it is likely that Laparoscopic Ultrasound
examination (LUS), may provide the same information as found by IOUS.
While laparoscopy and laparoscopic ultrasound examination (LUS) is well established in the
staging and treatment of upper gastrointestinal cancers, this method is only sparsely
evaluated in the treatment of CRC. There are only very few and older data dealing with the
use of LUS in the Tumor - lymph Node and Metastases (TNM) staging in patients with cancer in
the colon and rectum. Several small studies have investigated the use of LUS to evaluate the
M-stage in laparoscopic colorectal surgery and all studies show an increased detection of
liver metastases. Overall, seems LUS to be better than the current pre-operative image
modalities, and the LUS and the IOUS has also been found to be able to locate small tumors
in the colon.
Based on the above, a recent review concluded that the data about the routine use of
laparoscopy and LUS in patients with CRC are not sufficient, but that LUS probably could be
used for assessment of the liver, liver-metastases and non-regional lymph nodes. There are
no randomized studies dealing with the use of LUS in laparoscopic surgery for CRC.
It is not a standard routine to use LUS of the liver, tumor and retroperitoneum during
laparoscopic surgery for CRC.
In prospective and blinded studies a percutaneous contrast-enhanced ultrasound examination
(CEUS) of the liver proved to be able to detect significantly more liver metastases from CRC
than conventional percutaneous ultrasound.
With the new second-generation contrast agents CEUS seems to be equivalent to the
contrast-enhanced CT and Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for detection liver-metastases.
Liver metastases are frequent in patients with CRC and the use of intraoperative ultrasound
(IOUS) during open surgery for CRC, has previously been regarded as the gold standard.
Contrast-enhanced IOUS (CE-IOUS) during open surgery for CRC is only sparsely evaluated, but
has been shown to increase sensitivity for detection liver-metastases. There is on the other
hand, not found literature that has been describing the use of laparoscopic CE-IOUS during
laparoscopic surgery for CRC.
With this project we want to elucidate whether the use of LUS in laparoscopic surgery for
CRC will alter the patient's TNM stage and surgical approach and whether potential changes
have any clinical consequence for the individual patient. Furthermore, we wish to
investigate whether contrast-enhanced LUS increases detection rate for liver metastases.
Method The study is designed as a prospective, randomized multicenter study and include 280
patients.
At the Department of Surgery, Odense University Hospital, they annually conducted around 150
laparoscopic resections for CRC, but the department has a selected patient material. To get
a representative sample of patients with CRC, and to get included as many patients as
possible within the given timeframe, the project will therefore be conducted as a
multicenter study.
The participating centers perform all laparoscopic CRC surgery at a high level, and both the
technical equipment and the necessary scanning competencies are available on the departments
involved.
Prior to the start of the project, the surgeons of the included departments will be trained
in the LUS method, so that assessment and description of the intra-abdominal findings are
standardized.
They included patients randomly assigned either to the department's standard laparoscopic
surgery or standard laparoscopic surgery plus a LUS examination.
In the standard arm the conditions at the abdomen is only assessed by laparoscopy
immediately prior to the resection.
In the second group the intra-abdominal conditions are also assessed by laparoscopy, but
then supplemented with a LUS examination of the primary tumor, liver and retroperitoneum.
Both laparoscopy and LUS will take place just prior in to the operation itself and will not
require further intervention or additional portholes.
If there at the LUS examination is found undiagnosed liver metastases or lymph nodes outside
the planned operation field, then the patient is sent to the Department of Surgery A, Odense
University Hospital, for a multidisciplinary tumor conference.
In cases where the LUS examination suspects liver metastases and / or remove lymph node
metastases in patients who are included in the project at the Department of Surgery A,
Odense University Hospital, then a intraoperative LUS-guided fine-needle aspirations- biopsy
(FNA) or tru-cut biopsy will be performed and marked with a little silver pin. The latter is
used for follow-up after pretreatment and to locate potential rest tumor.
All other patients follow the Departments usual routines for adjuvant therapy.
Those patients who are selected for laparoscopic resection at the Department A, University
Hospital also offers to participate in a contrast-enhanced laparoscopic Ultrasound
examination during surgery. A specialist with skills in contrast-enhanced ultrasound will
perform the examination.
Before the contrast study is performed the surgeon notes the findings after conventional
LUS, so that the patients examined at University Hospital also is part of the total material
on an equal footing with those scanned in the other departments.
All patients included in the project will undergo a three-phase control computed tomography
(CT) scan 3 months after surgery. This is to evaluate whether there might be overlooked
metastases in the laparoscopy and LUS evaluation.
All the information about the patients are entered and recorded in a database. Information
on death will be deducted from the Civil Registration and local administrative databases.
After completion of the inclusion of patients, the two arms will be compared with account of
changes in the TNM-stage and surgical approach in relation to the pre-operative assessment.
The possible changes are evaluated from strict, predefined criteria and are assessed
whatever they have clinical relevancy, and finally the potential effect of contrast-enhanced
LUS compared to LUS alone is assessed.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05551052 -
CRC Detection Reliable Assessment With Blood
|
||
Completed |
NCT03457454 -
Reducing Rural Colon Cancer Disparities
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06006390 -
CEA Targeting Chimeric Antigen Receptor T Lymphocytes (CAR-T) in the Treatment of CEA Positive Advanced Solid Tumors
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04088955 -
A Digimed Oncology PharmacoTherapy Registry
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT06010862 -
Clinical Study of CEA-targeted CAR-T Therapy for CEA-positive Advanced/Metastatic Malignant Solid Tumors
|
Phase 1 | |
Terminated |
NCT01347645 -
Irinotecan Plus E7820 Versus FOLFIRI in Second-Line Therapy in Patients With Locally Advanced or Metastatic Colon or Rectal Cancer
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT03390907 -
Hybrid APC Assisted EMR for Large Colon Polyps
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03175224 -
APL-101 Study of Subjects With NSCLC With c-Met EXON 14 Skip Mutations and c-Met Dysregulation Advanced Solid Tumors
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT04079478 -
The AID Study: Artificial Intelligence for Colorectal Adenoma Detection
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04057274 -
Acute Effect of modeRate-intensity aerOBIc Exercise on Colon Cancer Cell Growth
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03190941 -
Administering Peripheral Blood Lymphocytes Transduced With a Murine T-Cell Receptor Recognizing the G12V Variant of Mutated RAS in HLA-A*11:01 Patients
|
Phase 1/Phase 2 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05147545 -
Impact of Exercise and Hyperlipidic Meal on Free Circulating DNA in Patients With Metastatic Colonic Cancer and Healthy Subjects
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05026268 -
The Laparoscopic Right Colectomy With Intracoroporeal Anastomosis
|
N/A | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT03277235 -
Effect of a Resilience Model-Based Care Plan in Newly Diagnosed Colorectal Cancer Patients
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02730702 -
Colon Cancer Risk-stratification Via Optical Analysis of Rectal Ultrastructure
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02959541 -
PK/PD Investigation of Calciumfolinat in Blood, Tumor and Adjacent Mucosa in Patient With Colon Cancer
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02810652 -
Perioperative Geriatrics Intervention for Older Cancer Patients Undergoing Surgical Resection
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT02577627 -
Multi-Indication, Retrospective Oncological Study to Validate the Accuracy in Predicting TTP by PrediCare in Patients Under SOC
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT02628535 -
Safety Study of MGD009 in B7-H3-expressing Tumors
|
Phase 1 | |
Recruiting |
NCT02526836 -
Complete Mesocolic Excision With Central Vessel Ligation Compared With Conventional Surgery for Colon Cancer
|
Phase 2/Phase 3 |