View clinical trials related to Larynx Cancer.
Filter by:Altered fractionated radiotherapy and concomitant radio-chemotherapy have been shown to be two possibilities for improving efficacy of radiotherapy in locally advanced head and neck carcinomas. In this multicentric study, we tested the hypothesis that accelerated radiotherapy could be delivered concomitantly with conventional high doses of CDDP-5FU, aiming to improve both local control and on distant metastases as compared to very accelerated radiotherapy.
The purpose of this study is to identify in a prospective manner microregional profiles of oxygenation and proliferation based on exogenous and endogenous markers that are predictive for outcome of radiotherapy in squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx and to investigate if these profiles can identify patients that are most likely to benefit from hypoxia modifying treatment strategies like ARCON (Accelerated radiotherapy combined with carbogen breathing and nicotinamide).
This is a multicentric randomized phase III trial comparing conventional radiotherapy with concomitant chemotherapy versus accelerated radiotherapy with concomitant chemotherapy versus very accelerated radiotherapy in patients with stage III-IV head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. The main end point is the event free survival.
TITLE: A multicentre, randomised, phase III clinical trial comparing accelerated radiotherapy with accelerated radiotherapy plus carbogen and nicotinamide (ARCON) in clinical stage T2-4 laryngeal carcinoma. PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Does the addition of carbogen and nicotinamide to a schedule of accelerated radiotherapy in patients with clinical stage T2-4 laryngeal carcinoma improve local primary tumour control? Definitive analysis will be performed on local control rates at two years after completion of radiotherapy. SECONDARY OBJECTIVES: Does the addition of carbogen and nicotinamide - increase the larynx preservation rate? - increase the regional control rate? - increase the toxicity of accelerated radiotherapy? - improve the overall quality of life? - improve the disease-free survival? - improve the overall survival? STUDY DESIGN: An open-label, randomised clinical trial assigning patients in a 1:1 ratio to one of the following treatment arms: - accelerated radiotherapy - accelerated radiotherapy plus carbogen and nicotinamide PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS AND NUMBER: 344 patients with clinical T2-4 laryngeal carcinoma MEASUREMENTS: - time to local failure - time to regional failure - survival with functional larynx - overall and disease-free survival - frequency and severity of complications related to radiotherapy and carbogen and nicotinamide - quality of life assessment
Surgery with post operative radiotherapy (PORT) had been the mainstay of treatment for advanced laryngeal-pharyngeal cancers (ALHC) until the eighth decade of the past century. Total laryngectomy with post-operative radiotherapy (TL + PORT) used to result in permanent tracheostomy and loss of speech. Early trials like the VA or European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) trials compared surgery with post-operative radiotherapy to induction chemotherapy (ICT) and radiotherapy (RT). Subsequent attempts have been focused on the added benefit of including concurrent chemotherapy. There is no randomized trial available in the literature comparing concurrent chemoradiation with the standard treatment, i.e. surgery followed by radiotherapy. However, most of the studies comparing neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy reported better locoregional control rates and better survival rates with surgery followed by post-operative chemotherapy. Further, the advances in primary voice rehabilitation have substantially improved the quality of life after laryngectomy. Thus, there is a strong case for comparing the results of concurrent chemo-radiation with surgery and post-operative radiotherapy in a randomized clinical trial. This trial will answer the question - "whether we are saving voice at the cost of life". The investigators propose to randomize 900 patients of laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancers in surgery with PORT and a concomitant chemoradiation arm and compare the survival and locoregional control rates.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety of adding the investigational drug Motexafin Gadolinium to the standard treatment of radiation therapy and chemotherapy with drugs called 5-FU and cisplatin in patients with advanced head and neck cancer.